Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:25,462 --> 00:00:27,264
A LOT OF YOUNGER MUSICIANS
2
00:00:27,289 --> 00:00:30,125
WERE HANGING AROUND
WITH ELVIN JONES, AND THEY WERE TALKING ABOUT,
3
00:00:30,250 --> 00:00:32,624
"MAN, YOU KNOW,
WE HEAR THE INTENSITY THAT YOU GUYS PLAYED
4
00:00:32,749 --> 00:00:34,125
"WHEN YOU WERE PLAYING
WITH COLTRANE.
5
00:00:34,250 --> 00:00:35,666
"WHAT WAS THAT LIKE?
6
00:00:35,791 --> 00:00:37,624
HOW DO YOU, LIKE, PLAY
WITH THAT KIND OF INTENSITY?"
7
00:00:37,749 --> 00:00:39,624
AND ELVIN LOOKS
AT THEM AND SAYS,
8
00:00:39,749 --> 00:00:42,958
"YOU GOT TO BE WILLING
TO DIE WITH THE MOTHERFUCKER."
9
00:00:43,797 --> 00:00:45,839
AND THEN THEY STARTED LAUGHING
LIKE KIDS DO
10
00:00:45,864 --> 00:00:47,139
WAITING FOR THE PUNCHLINE,
11
00:00:47,164 --> 00:00:52,291
AND THEN THEY REALIZE
SOMEWHERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THAT, HE WAS SERIOUS.
12
00:00:53,010 --> 00:00:54,843
HOW MANY PEOPLE DO YOU KNOW
13
00:00:55,005 --> 00:00:58,338
THAT ARE WILLING TO DIE PERIOD,
DIE WITH ANYBODY?
14
00:00:58,463 --> 00:01:00,547
AND WHEN YOU LISTEN
TO THOSE RECORDS,
15
00:01:00,672 --> 00:01:02,672
THAT'S EXACTLY
WHAT THEY SOUND LIKE.
16
00:01:02,838 --> 00:01:08,171
I MEAN, THAT THEY WOULD DIE
FOR EACH OTHER.
17
00:01:25,296 --> 00:01:28,421
IN THE YEARS THAT
FOLLOWED CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH,
18
00:01:28,547 --> 00:01:34,838
AMERICANS FOUND THEMSELVES
LIVING IN AN ANXIOUS GOLDEN AGE.
19
00:01:35,005 --> 00:01:39,255
THEY SAW THE REELECTION
OF THE OLDEST PRESIDENT IN THEIR HISTORY
20
00:01:39,380 --> 00:01:45,547
AND THE ELECTION
OF THE YOUNGEST.
21
00:01:45,672 --> 00:01:49,213
THE BROOKLYN DODGERS
LEFT NEW YORK FOR LOS ANGELES,
22
00:01:49,338 --> 00:01:51,213
SCIENCE CONQUERED POLIO,
23
00:01:51,338 --> 00:02:00,171
AND THE SOVIETS SENT
THE FIRST SATELLITE HURTLING INTO SPACE.
24
00:02:00,296 --> 00:02:05,005
BLACK AMERICANS INTENSIFIED
THEIR DEMAND FOR CIVIL RIGHTS,
25
00:02:05,171 --> 00:02:09,838
INSISTING ON INTEGRATED SCHOOLS
AND PUBLIC FACILITIES,
26
00:02:09,964 --> 00:02:16,505
REFUSING TO MOVE
TO THE BACK OF THE BUS.
27
00:02:16,630 --> 00:02:19,505
JAZZ OF EVERY KIND SURVIVED,
28
00:02:19,672 --> 00:02:22,755
BUT IT STRUGGLED
TO FIND AN AUDIENCE.
29
00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:26,838
BENNY GOODMAN PLAYED JAZZ
ONLY OCCASIONALLY NOW,
30
00:02:27,005 --> 00:02:29,797
PREFERRING TO PERFORM
CLASSICAL MUSIC.
31
00:02:29,922 --> 00:02:35,380
DUKE ELLINGTON AND COUNT BASIE
AND DIZZY GILLESPIE WERE STILL ON THE ROAD,
32
00:02:35,505 --> 00:02:40,213
BUT THEY FOUND WORK
HARDER AND HARDER TO COME BY.
33
00:02:40,338 --> 00:02:43,088
LOUIS ARMSTRONG
WOULD FALL OUT OF FAVOR
34
00:02:43,213 --> 00:02:44,713
WITH MANY BLACK AMERICANS
35
00:02:44,838 --> 00:02:49,672
THEN RISK HIS WHOLE CAREER
ON A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE.
36
00:02:49,797 --> 00:02:54,838
MILES DAVIS' BRILLIANT MUSIC
AND ARROGANT SELF-CONFIDENCE
37
00:02:55,005 --> 00:02:59,005
WOULD MAKE HIM AN ICON FOR YOUNG
BLACKS AND WHITES ALIKE,
38
00:02:59,129 --> 00:03:05,005
BUT SUCCESS DID LITTLE
TO SUBDUE HIS INNER DEMONS.
39
00:03:05,171 --> 00:03:08,547
MEMBERS OF THE "COOL,"
MOSTLY WHITE WEST COAST SCHOOL
40
00:03:08,672 --> 00:03:11,672
CONTINUED TO DO WELL
ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES,
41
00:03:11,797 --> 00:03:15,296
AND PARTLY IN REACTION
TO THEIR POPULARITY,
42
00:03:15,421 --> 00:03:18,630
A HARD-DRIVING DRUMMER
FROM PITTSBURGH STARTED A GROUP
43
00:03:18,755 --> 00:03:24,838
AIMED AT BRINGING JAZZ BACK
TO ITS AFRICAN-AMERICAN ROOTS.
44
00:03:24,964 --> 00:03:27,088
MEANWHILE,
AGAINST FORMIDABLE ODDS
45
00:03:27,213 --> 00:03:29,964
AND IN THE FACE
OF WITHERING CRITICISM,
46
00:03:30,088 --> 00:03:33,088
A HANDFUL OF YOUNG INNOVATORS
WOULD EMERGE.
47
00:03:33,213 --> 00:03:35,463
THEY PUSHED THE BOUNDARIES
OF THE MUSIC
48
00:03:35,588 --> 00:03:39,088
FAR BEYOND WHERE EVEN PARKER
AND THE BEBOPPERS HAD GONE,
49
00:03:39,213 --> 00:03:42,296
UNTIL CONVENTIONAL NOTIONS
OF RHYTHM AND HARMONY
50
00:03:42,421 --> 00:03:48,505
AND AGREED-UPON CHORD SEQUENCES
HAD ALL BEEN ABANDONED.
51
00:03:48,630 --> 00:03:51,713
THE MUSIC WAS CHANGING
FASTER THAN EVER NOW,
52
00:03:51,838 --> 00:03:54,463
BRANCHING OUT
IN UNEXPECTED WAYS,
53
00:03:54,588 --> 00:03:57,380
BREEDING FACTIONS
AND SOMETIMES BITTER QUARRELS
54
00:03:57,505 --> 00:04:03,922
ABOUT ARTISTIC FREEDOM
AND THE VERY NATURE OF CREATIVITY.
55
00:04:04,046 --> 00:04:08,213
THE DEFINITION OF WHAT WAS JAZZ
AND WHAT WAS NOT
56
00:04:08,338 --> 00:04:11,838
BEGAN TO BLUR.
57
00:04:12,005 --> 00:04:14,713
IN THE YEARS THAT FOLLOWED
CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH,
58
00:04:14,838 --> 00:04:19,880
JAZZ WOULD STRUGGLE
TO EMBRACE IT ALL.
59
00:04:20,005 --> 00:04:21,964
WHEN WE TALK
ABOUT MUSIC,
60
00:04:22,088 --> 00:04:23,964
THE REASON WE USE TERMS
THAT SOUND VAGUE
61
00:04:24,088 --> 00:04:26,630
IS NOT BECAUSE THERE'S
ANYTHING VAGUE ABOUT MUSIC,
62
00:04:26,755 --> 00:04:30,505
BUT BECAUSE MUSIC EXPRESSES
HUMAN EXPERIENCE SO SPECIFICALLY,
63
00:04:30,630 --> 00:04:32,005
IN SUCH SPECIFIC WAYS,
64
00:04:32,129 --> 00:04:35,672
THAT WHEN YOU ATTEMPT TO FIND
LANGUAGE TO DESCRIBE THAT,
65
00:04:35,797 --> 00:04:37,171
THE WORDS FALL SHORT.
66
00:04:37,296 --> 00:04:39,672
WHAT'S FALLING SHORT
IN THAT EQUATION IS LANGUAGE,
67
00:04:39,797 --> 00:04:41,296
NOT THE MUSIC.
68
00:04:41,421 --> 00:04:43,463
THE MUSIC EXPRESSES THINGS
ABOUT HUMAN EXPERIENCE
69
00:04:43,588 --> 00:04:45,713
THAT CANNOT BE EXPRESSED
ANY OTHER WAY.
70
00:04:45,838 --> 00:04:56,005
THAT'S WHY IT'S SO IMPORTANT.
71
00:05:05,630 --> 00:05:07,505
IN 1955,
72
00:05:07,630 --> 00:05:11,547
A BLIND PERFORMER
FROM ALBANY, GEORGIA, NAMED RAY CHARLES
73
00:05:11,672 --> 00:05:14,672
DID SOMETHING FEW OTHER ARTISTS
HAD EVER DARED TO DO.
74
00:05:14,797 --> 00:05:16,672
♪♪ WOMAN... ♪♪
75
00:05:16,797 --> 00:05:19,005
HE BLENDED JAZZ AND BLUES
76
00:05:19,129 --> 00:05:23,672
WITH THE SACRED MUSIC
OF THE SANCTIFIED CHURCH.
77
00:05:23,797 --> 00:05:25,630
♪♪ THAT'S BECAUSE ♪♪
78
00:05:25,755 --> 00:05:28,171
♪♪ I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪
79
00:05:28,338 --> 00:05:30,005
♪♪ WAY OVER TOWN ♪♪
80
00:05:30,171 --> 00:05:32,171
♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪
81
00:05:32,296 --> 00:05:34,129
♪♪ YES, I HAVE... ♪♪
82
00:05:34,255 --> 00:05:38,463
SOME DENOUNCED
THE RESULT AS BLASPHEMOUS, "DEVIL'S MUSIC,"
83
00:05:38,588 --> 00:05:41,797
BUT BLACK TEENAGERS
FLOCKED TO HEAR IT,
84
00:05:41,922 --> 00:05:44,838
AND I GOT A WOMAN
SHOT TO THE TOP
85
00:05:45,005 --> 00:05:46,838
OF THE RHYTHM AND BLUES CHART.
86
00:05:47,005 --> 00:05:50,088
♪♪ SHE'S A KIND OF
FRIEND INDEED ♪♪
87
00:05:50,213 --> 00:05:54,088
RAY CHARLES' BRAND OF MUSIC
BECAME KNOWN AS "SOUL."
88
00:05:54,213 --> 00:05:56,046
♪♪ SHE'S GOOD TO ME♪
89
00:05:56,171 --> 00:05:57,964
♪♪ YES, I HAVE ♪♪
90
00:05:58,088 --> 00:06:00,255
♪♪ SHE SAVES HER LOVIN' ♪♪
91
00:06:00,380 --> 00:06:02,421
♪♪ EARLY IN THE MORNIN' ♪♪
92
00:06:02,547 --> 00:06:04,255
♪♪ JUST FOR ME ♪♪
93
00:06:04,380 --> 00:06:06,421
♪♪ OH, YES ♪♪
94
00:06:06,547 --> 00:06:08,338
♪♪ HEY, I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪
95
00:06:08,463 --> 00:06:10,129
♪♪ WAY 'CROSS TOWN... ♪♪
96
00:06:10,255 --> 00:06:13,213
SOME WHITES WERE
LISTENING TO SOUL MUSIC, TOO,
97
00:06:13,338 --> 00:06:18,046
INCLUDING A ONE-TIME
TRUCK DRIVER BORN IN TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI.
98
00:06:18,171 --> 00:06:20,922
♪♪ I--I--I--I--I'M
HER LOVIN' MAN ♪♪
99
00:06:21,046 --> 00:06:24,880
NOW WHITE
TEENAGERS HAD A NEW DANCE MUSIC OF THEIR OWN.
100
00:06:25,005 --> 00:06:27,713
THEY CALLED IT ROCK AND ROLL,
101
00:06:27,838 --> 00:06:29,713
AND THE AUDIENCE FOR JAZZ,
102
00:06:29,838 --> 00:06:32,338
ONCE THE MOST POPULAR MUSIC
IN AMERICA,
103
00:06:32,463 --> 00:06:34,505
SHRANK STILL FURTHER.
104
00:06:34,672 --> 00:06:37,547
♪♪ I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪
105
00:06:37,672 --> 00:06:40,296
♪♪ WAY OVER TOWN, THAT'S ♪♪
106
00:06:40,421 --> 00:06:42,838
♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪
107
00:06:43,005 --> 00:06:49,380
♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪
108
00:06:49,505 --> 00:06:52,463
BUT FOR THOSE
WHO STAYED WITH JAZZ,
109
00:06:52,588 --> 00:06:58,547
THE MUSIC WOULD NEVER BE
MORE THRILLING.
110
00:06:58,672 --> 00:07:01,630
THERE ARE MANY
DIFFERENT TYPES OF MUSICIANS
111
00:07:01,755 --> 00:07:03,630
WITH DIFFERENT TALENTS.
112
00:07:03,755 --> 00:07:06,129
LIKE, ONE MUSICIAN MIGHT
BE ABLE TO REALLY HEAR HARMONY,
113
00:07:06,255 --> 00:07:08,129
ANOTHER MUSICIAN MIGHT BE ABLE
TO PLAY REALLY FAST,
114
00:07:08,255 --> 00:07:09,713
ANOTHER ONE
MIGHT HAVE A GREAT SOUND,
115
00:07:09,838 --> 00:07:13,296
ANOTHER ONE MIGHT HAVE
A TREMENDOUS PERSONALITY THAT'S VERY UNIQUE,
116
00:07:13,421 --> 00:07:15,505
ANOTHER ONE
MIGHT JUST SWING HARD,
117
00:07:15,630 --> 00:07:18,255
AND SOME MUSICIANS' TALENT
IS IN KNOWING OTHER PEOPLE,
118
00:07:18,380 --> 00:07:21,005
AND THEY CAN PLAY,
AND WHEN YOU HEAR THEM PLAY,
119
00:07:21,129 --> 00:07:23,838
YOU HEAR THE SOUND OF A LOT
OF PEOPLE IN THEIR PLAYING.
120
00:07:24,005 --> 00:07:26,255
OTHER MUSICIANS PLAY,
AND YOU HEAR NEUROSIS.
121
00:07:26,380 --> 00:07:27,755
BUT IT'S GREAT, YOU KNOW.
122
00:07:27,880 --> 00:07:29,672
OTHERS PLAY,
YOU HEAR TREMENDOUS FEAR,
123
00:07:29,838 --> 00:07:31,171
BUT YOU HEAR THEM
CONFRONTING IT.
124
00:07:31,338 --> 00:07:34,713
SO IN JAZZ MUSIC, WE HAVE MANY
DIFFERENT TYPES OF MUSICIANS.
125
00:07:34,838 --> 00:07:38,838
AND THE MUSIC IS POWERFUL
FOR ANY TYPE OF PERSON.
126
00:07:38,964 --> 00:07:41,171
AND SONNY ROLLINS
IS THE TYPE OF MUSICIAN
127
00:07:41,338 --> 00:07:42,922
THAT'S CONSTANTLY
QUESTIONING HIMSELF.
128
00:07:48,171 --> 00:07:50,797
SONNY ROLLINS IS A TITAN.
129
00:07:50,922 --> 00:07:55,547
HE HAS THAT EBULLIENCE
THAT I ASSOCIATE WITH LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
130
00:07:55,672 --> 00:08:01,296
AND I THINK
VERY FEW MUSICIANS HAVE THAT.
131
00:08:01,421 --> 00:08:04,088
BUT SONNY IS
AN OLD-STYLE MUSICIAN
132
00:08:04,213 --> 00:08:06,797
IN THE SENSE
THAT HE DISTRUSTS RECORDS.
133
00:08:06,922 --> 00:08:08,505
HE DOESN'T ENJOY RECORDING.
134
00:08:08,630 --> 00:08:10,672
HE BELIEVES THAT RECORDS
ARE BASICALLY COMMERCIALS
135
00:08:10,797 --> 00:08:12,505
TO BRING PEOPLE
INTO THE CONCERTS.
136
00:08:12,630 --> 00:08:14,505
THAT'S WHERE THE MUSIC
REALLY TAKES PLACE.
137
00:08:14,630 --> 00:08:17,505
HE'S A LIVE PERFORMER WHO LIKES
TO RESPOND TO THE MOMENT.
138
00:08:17,630 --> 00:08:21,005
BUT HE'S SUCH AN HONEST MUSICIAN
THAT IF HE'S NOT INSPIRED,
139
00:08:21,129 --> 00:08:24,505
HE WON'T SIMPLY PLAY BY ROTE
THE WAY MOST MUSICIANS WILL
140
00:08:24,630 --> 00:08:26,505
AND TURN OUT A PERFECTLY
ACCEPTABLE PERFORMANCE
141
00:08:26,630 --> 00:08:29,547
THAT THE AUDIENCE WON'T BE ABLE
TO TELL THERE'S ANYTHING WRONG.
142
00:08:29,672 --> 00:08:31,505
NO. HE'LL RIFF ALL EVENING.
143
00:08:31,630 --> 00:08:34,505
HE'LL GOOF OFF OR PLAY
THE SAME TUNE FOR HALF AN HOUR.
144
00:08:34,630 --> 00:08:37,005
I'VE SEEN HIM PLAY THE SAME
MELODY STATEMENT FOR 20 MINUTES
145
00:08:37,129 --> 00:08:38,630
LIKE HE CAN'T GET OUT OF IT,
146
00:08:38,755 --> 00:08:40,171
THERE'S NOTHING
HE REALLY WANTS TO PLAY.
147
00:08:40,338 --> 00:08:42,046
BUT YOU CATCH HIM
ON AN INSPIRED NIGHT,
148
00:08:42,171 --> 00:08:45,672
AND HE'D TEAR THE HAIR
OFF YOUR HEAD.
149
00:08:45,838 --> 00:08:50,797
IT SEEMED TO
MANY CRITICS LOOKING FOR AN HEIR TO CHARLIE PARKER
150
00:08:50,922 --> 00:08:53,713
THAT SONNY ROLLINS
WAS THE MOST INNOVATIVE
151
00:08:53,838 --> 00:08:59,046
AND INFLUENTIAL
SAXOPHONE PLAYER IN JAZZ.
152
00:08:59,171 --> 00:09:02,046
HE GREW UP ON THE WEST SIDE
OF MANHATTAN,
153
00:09:02,171 --> 00:09:05,005
A NEIGHBOR OF THELONIOUS MONK,
BUD POWELL,
154
00:09:05,129 --> 00:09:07,338
AND THE GREAT COLEMAN HAWKINS,
155
00:09:07,463 --> 00:09:16,338
WHOSE BIG AGGRESSIVE TONE
HE WOULD INCORPORATE INTO HIS OWN.
156
00:09:16,463 --> 00:09:19,338
IT'S LIKE A LOT OF CATS
ARE PRACTICERS,
157
00:09:19,463 --> 00:09:21,505
AND THEN THEY PRACTICE,
AND THEN THEY COME,
158
00:09:21,630 --> 00:09:24,005
AND THEN THEY PLAY
BASICALLY WHAT THEY'VE PRACTICED.
159
00:09:24,129 --> 00:09:26,005
SONNY ROLLINS
WOULD JUST COME OUT AND PLAY.
160
00:09:26,129 --> 00:09:28,505
AND YOU CAN TELL A LOT
OF THE THINGS THAT HE'S PLAYING
161
00:09:28,672 --> 00:09:30,505
ARE JUST THINGS
THAT POP IN HIS HEAD,
162
00:09:30,630 --> 00:09:31,755
IMMEDIATELY, RIGHT THERE.
163
00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:33,255
THE DRUMMER WILL PLAY SOMETHING,
164
00:09:33,380 --> 00:09:35,672
HE'LL HEAR IT
AND TURN IT AROUND.
165
00:09:35,838 --> 00:09:37,629
HE'S IN THE MOMENT.
166
00:09:42,630 --> 00:09:45,630
LIKE SO MANY OTHER
ADMIRERS OF CHARLIE PARKER,
167
00:09:45,755 --> 00:09:47,755
ROLLINS BECAME ADDICTED
TO HEROIN.
168
00:09:47,880 --> 00:09:51,755
BUT UNLIKE MANY,
HE ABRUPTLY LEFT NEW YORK
169
00:09:51,880 --> 00:09:54,880
AND WORKED AS A DAY LABORER
FOR A YEAR
170
00:09:55,005 --> 00:09:58,838
TO GET HIMSELF OFF DRUGS.
171
00:09:58,964 --> 00:10:02,547
WHEN HE RETURNED
AND BEGAN WORKING WITH THE DRUMMER MAX ROACH,
172
00:10:02,672 --> 00:10:04,046
HE SEEMED MORE POWERFUL
173
00:10:04,171 --> 00:10:16,005
AND MORE RHYTHMICALLY INVENTIVE
THAN EVER.
174
00:10:16,129 --> 00:10:19,672
HIS SOLOS WERE LONG,
ENDLESSLY IMAGINATIVE,
175
00:10:19,838 --> 00:10:27,755
YET LINKED WITH EVERYTHING
THAT HAD GONE BEFORE.
176
00:10:27,880 --> 00:10:32,713
ONE OF ROLLINS' BEST-KNOWN
ALBUMS WAS SAXOPHONE COLOSSUS,
177
00:10:32,838 --> 00:10:40,171
AND HE SEEMED THE LIVING
EMBODIMENT OF THAT WORD.
178
00:10:40,296 --> 00:10:42,213
PEOPLE HAVE
REALLY UNDERESTIMATED
179
00:10:42,338 --> 00:10:46,296
THE INTELLECTUAL ACHIEVEMENT
OF JAZZ
180
00:10:46,421 --> 00:10:49,797
AND WHAT IT TELLS US
ABOUT THE HUMAN MIND
181
00:10:49,922 --> 00:10:52,463
AND HOW CAPACIOUS
THE HUMAN MIND IS.
182
00:10:52,588 --> 00:10:56,547
AND FOR ME, SONNY ROLLINS
IS A PRIME EXAMPLE OF THIS.
183
00:10:56,672 --> 00:11:00,630
I WENT TO SEE HIM PLAY
A COUPLE YEARS AGO
184
00:11:00,755 --> 00:11:07,964
ON THE SATURDAY NIGHT
BEFORE EASTER SUNDAY.
185
00:11:08,088 --> 00:11:10,505
AND I WENT TO SEE THE LATE SHOW,
186
00:11:10,672 --> 00:11:18,296
AND HE STARTED TO PLAY
HIS FAVORITE THEME SONG,ST. THOMAS.
187
00:11:18,421 --> 00:11:21,213
HE'S PLAYING, IMPROVISING
JUST THE MOST MAGNIFICENT STUFF
188
00:11:21,338 --> 00:11:23,171
YOU'VE EVER HEARD.
189
00:11:23,296 --> 00:11:26,713
AT EXACTLY 10 SECONDS
TO MIDNIGHT,
190
00:11:26,838 --> 00:11:29,338
AMIDST HIS SOLOING,
HE PLAYS...
191
00:11:35,213 --> 00:11:36,838
BACK TO ST. THOMAS.
192
00:11:37,005 --> 00:11:39,505
THE PIANO PLAYER CRACKS UP,
A FEW PEOPLE CRACK UP.
193
00:11:39,630 --> 00:11:41,088
HE HAD QUOTED...
194
00:11:41,213 --> 00:11:42,755
♪♪ WITH YOUR EASTER BONNET ♪
195
00:11:42,880 --> 00:11:44,755
♪♪ WITH ALL THE FRILLS UPON IT ♪
196
00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:46,171
AT EXACTLY MIDNIGHT,
197
00:11:46,296 --> 00:11:48,797
THAT IS, EXACTLY THE TIME IT
HAD TURNED INTO EASTER SUNDAY,
198
00:11:48,922 --> 00:11:54,588
HE QUOTED EASTER BONNET AFTER
PLAYING A SOLO FOR 15 MINUTES.
199
00:11:54,713 --> 00:12:10,213
WHAT KIND OF MIND
DOES THIS TELL US ABOUT?
200
00:12:19,505 --> 00:12:23,338
BUT FOR ALL
THE SELF-CONFIDENT SWAGGER OF HIS SOUND,
201
00:12:23,505 --> 00:12:32,171
SONNY ROLLINS WAS ALWAYS
HIS OWN TOUGHEST CRITIC.
202
00:12:32,296 --> 00:12:37,088
IN 1959, THE PRESSURE OF HAVING
TO OUTDO HIMSELF EVERY NIGHT
203
00:12:37,213 --> 00:12:38,797
BECAME TOO MUCH.
204
00:12:38,922 --> 00:12:41,296
HE STOPPED PERFORMING ALTOGETHER
205
00:12:41,421 --> 00:12:45,088
AND BEGAN VENTURING ALONE
OUT ONTO THE WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE
206
00:12:45,213 --> 00:13:05,505
TO PLAY HIS SAXOPHONE
INTO THE WIND.
207
00:13:05,630 --> 00:13:07,171
HE'S THE TYPE OF MUSICIAN
208
00:13:07,296 --> 00:13:09,456
THAT'S ALWAYS
REASSESSING HIMSELF.
209
00:13:16,298 --> 00:13:18,421
SO I COULD SEE
HOW AT A CERTAIN TIME,
210
00:13:18,547 --> 00:13:20,046
HE DIDN'T FEEL
HE WAS DEVELOPING
211
00:13:20,171 --> 00:13:21,964
TO THE LEVEL
THAT HE WANTED TO DEVELOP,
212
00:13:22,088 --> 00:13:23,463
SO HE JUST STOPPED
PLAYING PUBLICLY
213
00:13:23,588 --> 00:13:25,985
AND WENT OUT AND WOULD PRACTICE
ON THE BRIDGE.
214
00:13:26,010 --> 00:13:27,463
AND, YOU KNOW,
IT'S LIKE A ROMANTIC THING,
215
00:13:27,588 --> 00:13:29,421
SOMEBODY ON THE BRIDGE
WITH A SAXOPHONE.
216
00:13:29,547 --> 00:13:32,737
BUT THE WHOLE CONCEPTION
OF ISOLATION
217
00:13:32,762 --> 00:13:35,533
AND HAVING TO REALLY
CONFRONT THE DRAGON...
218
00:13:39,400 --> 00:13:43,171
WHICH IS THE DRAGON OF MUSIC
AND OF PRACTICING YOUR HORN.
219
00:13:43,338 --> 00:13:46,005
AND THEN WHEN HE CAME OFF
OF THAT PERIOD
220
00:13:46,129 --> 00:13:47,547
OF INTENSE PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT,
221
00:13:47,672 --> 00:13:51,303
HE WAS PLAYING EVEN MORE HORN
THAN HE PLAYED BEFORE.
222
00:13:58,915 --> 00:14:03,296
I THINK SONNY ROLLINS WAS ONE
OF THE HEIRS TO LOUIS ARMSTRONG
223
00:14:03,421 --> 00:14:06,838
WHO UNDERSTOOD THAT PITCHES ARE
NOT CENTRALLY IMPORTANT IN JAZZ.
224
00:14:06,964 --> 00:14:08,547
RHYTHM IS.
225
00:14:10,296 --> 00:14:12,838
HE COULD PLAY A SOLO
USING ONE PITCH
226
00:14:12,964 --> 00:14:15,797
THAT WOULD SWING SO VIOLENTLY
YOU COULDN'T BELIEVE IT.
227
00:14:38,505 --> 00:14:40,755
THERE'S NO END TO
WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH RHYTHM.
228
00:14:40,880 --> 00:14:45,171
AND TO FUSE POLYRHYTHM
WITH COMPLEX HARMONY
229
00:14:45,338 --> 00:15:05,547
IS AN AMAZING ACHIEVEMENT
OF JAZZ.
230
00:15:05,672 --> 00:15:08,588
ROLLINS
RETURNED TO JAZZ IN TRIUMPH,
231
00:15:08,713 --> 00:15:11,213
ONLY TO ABANDON IT AGAIN
SEVERAL TIMES
232
00:15:11,338 --> 00:15:13,421
OVER THE YEARS THAT FOLLOWED,
233
00:15:13,547 --> 00:15:18,213
AS HIS RESTLESS TALENT
AND HIS PRIVATE ANXIETY ABOUT ITS WORTH
234
00:15:18,338 --> 00:15:22,338
BATTLED FOR HIS HEART AND MIND.
235
00:15:22,505 --> 00:15:25,713
"WE HAVE TO MAKE OURSELVES
AS PERFECT AS WE CAN,"
236
00:15:25,838 --> 00:15:30,672
HE ONCE SAID.
237
00:15:30,838 --> 00:15:32,505
THAT'S A VERY
FAMILIAR SCENE--
238
00:15:32,630 --> 00:15:35,005
DUKE ELLINGTON
AT HIS PIANO.
239
00:15:35,171 --> 00:15:37,505
AS WE BOTH KNOW,
BANDS COME AND GO.
240
00:15:37,672 --> 00:15:39,005
HOW DO YOU ACCOUNT
FOR THE FACT
241
00:15:39,171 --> 00:15:41,296
THAT YOURS HAS BEEN
UP THERE FOR SO LONG,
242
00:15:41,421 --> 00:15:42,797
THAT IT'S CONSTANTLY
IN DEMAND
243
00:15:42,922 --> 00:15:45,088
FOR, WHAT, MORE THAN
30 YEARS NOW, ISN'T IT?
244
00:15:45,213 --> 00:15:49,838
OH, IT'S
ABOUT 80% LUCK-- GOOD LUCK, THAT IS.
245
00:15:49,964 --> 00:15:51,338
MY IDEA OF GOOD LUCK
246
00:15:51,463 --> 00:15:53,713
IS BEING AT
THE RIGHT PLACE AT THE RIGHT TIME,
247
00:15:53,838 --> 00:15:55,838
DOING THE RIGHT
THING BEFORE THE RIGHT PEOPLE.
248
00:16:01,421 --> 00:16:04,171
DESPITE
HIS NEAR-UNIVERSAL FAME,
249
00:16:04,338 --> 00:16:13,088
BY THE MID-1950s,
DUKE ELLINGTON WAS IN TROUBLE.
250
00:16:13,213 --> 00:16:18,672
SOME OF HIS FINEST MUSICIANS
HAD LEFT HIM.
251
00:16:18,838 --> 00:16:25,505
RUMORS FLEW THAT HE
COULD NO LONGER AFFORD TO STAY ON THE ROAD.
252
00:16:25,630 --> 00:16:27,547
HE ADMITTED TO A REPORTER
253
00:16:27,672 --> 00:16:37,505
THAT, "OUR BAND IS OPERATING
AT A LOSS NOW."
254
00:16:37,630 --> 00:16:40,755
IN THE SUMMER OF 1955,
255
00:16:40,880 --> 00:16:43,797
HE FOUND HIMSELF
PLAYING HIS OLD TUNES
256
00:16:43,922 --> 00:16:56,838
FOR AN ICE SHOW AT THE AQUACADE
IN FLUSHING, NEW YORK.
257
00:16:56,964 --> 00:16:59,547
THEN IN JULY 1956,
258
00:16:59,672 --> 00:17:02,505
THE JAZZ IMPRESARIO GEORGE WEIN
INVITED HIM
259
00:17:02,630 --> 00:17:06,588
TO APPEAR AT THE THIRD ANNUAL
OUTDOOR JAZZ FESTIVAL
260
00:17:06,713 --> 00:17:09,088
HELD AT THE TRANQUIL
SUMMER RETREAT
261
00:17:09,213 --> 00:17:11,672
OF SOME OF AMERICA'S
WEALTHIEST FAMILIES--
262
00:17:11,838 --> 00:17:23,046
NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND.
263
00:17:23,171 --> 00:17:24,838
ELLINGTON SAW THE FESTIVAL
264
00:17:25,005 --> 00:17:27,838
AS A CHANCE TO REINVIGORATE
HIS CAREER,
265
00:17:28,005 --> 00:17:31,338
AND HE DID SOMETHING
HE HAD NEVER DONE.
266
00:17:31,505 --> 00:17:39,588
HE GAVE A PEP TALK TO HIS MEN
BEFORE THEY WENT ONSTAGE.
267
00:17:39,713 --> 00:17:40,880
THANK YOU.
268
00:17:41,005 --> 00:17:42,838
ELLINGTON HAD
PUT TOGETHER A PIECE
269
00:17:42,964 --> 00:17:45,005
CALLEDTHE NEWPORT FESTIVAL SUITE.
270
00:17:45,129 --> 00:17:47,547
IT WENT OVER WELL ENOUGH
WITH THE AUDIENCE,
271
00:17:47,672 --> 00:17:49,547
BUT AS IT CAME TO A CLOSE,
272
00:17:49,672 --> 00:17:52,088
PEOPLE BEGAN HEADING
FOR THE PARKING LOT.
273
00:17:55,630 --> 00:17:58,672
ELLINGTON CALLED FOR
ONE OF HIS OLD STANDBYS,
274
00:17:58,838 --> 00:18:16,630
DIMINUENDO AND CRESCENDOIN BLUE.
275
00:18:16,755 --> 00:18:24,380
PEOPLE STOPPED, LISTENED,
AND HURRIED BACK TO THEIR SEATS.
276
00:18:24,505 --> 00:18:35,421
THEN TENOR SAXOPHONIST
PAUL GONSALVES BEGAN TO PLAY.
277
00:18:35,547 --> 00:18:37,547
PEOPLE SAT
IN RESERVED SEATS NORMALLY,
278
00:18:37,672 --> 00:18:39,463
AND THEY SAT
AND WATCHED THE CONCERT,
279
00:18:39,588 --> 00:18:43,421
AND ONCE IN A WHILE,
THEY'D STAND UP AND CHEER AND GIVE A STANDING OVATION.
280
00:18:43,547 --> 00:18:45,922
BUT A WOMAN STARTED TO DANCE
281
00:18:46,046 --> 00:18:50,797
WHEN ELLINGTON HAD
PAUL GONSALVES PLAYING HIS TENOR SOLO.
282
00:18:50,922 --> 00:18:52,838
AND DUKE SAW THIS WOMAN DANCE.
283
00:18:53,005 --> 00:18:56,797
EVERYBODY CROWDED AROUND TO SEE
THE DANCING OF THIS WOMAN,
284
00:18:56,922 --> 00:18:58,880
A BLOND WOMAN FROM NEW BEDFORD.
285
00:18:59,005 --> 00:19:02,171
SHE WAS QUITE ATTRACTIVE.
286
00:19:02,296 --> 00:19:03,672
IT REALLY TOOK HOLD.
287
00:19:03,797 --> 00:19:05,505
AND ELLINGTON SAW
THIS THING HAPPENING,
288
00:19:05,672 --> 00:19:18,588
AND HE JUST KEPT
PAUL GONSALVES PLAYING.
289
00:19:18,713 --> 00:19:21,505
AND AS IT BEGAN TO BUILD,
290
00:19:21,672 --> 00:19:24,505
SOME GORGEOUS, VOLUPTUOUS LADY
IN THE AUDIENCE
291
00:19:24,672 --> 00:19:27,588
DECIDED THAT SHE WAS
BEING MOVED TO THE POINT
292
00:19:27,713 --> 00:19:29,838
WHERE SHE COULD NO LONGER
CONTAIN HERSELF,
293
00:19:30,005 --> 00:19:32,171
SO SHE JUMPED UP ON THE STAGE
294
00:19:32,338 --> 00:19:37,505
AND STARTED ALLOWING HERSELF
TO BE FLOUNCED AROUND A BIT.
295
00:19:37,672 --> 00:19:39,005
HA HA.
296
00:19:39,171 --> 00:19:41,171
AND ELLINGTON KIND OF
ENJOYED THAT,
297
00:19:41,338 --> 00:19:42,672
AND IT INSPIRED HIM,
298
00:19:42,838 --> 00:19:45,296
AND HE IN TURN
INSPIRED THE BAND,
299
00:19:45,421 --> 00:19:46,672
AND THE BAND WAS, UH...
300
00:19:46,838 --> 00:19:48,505
SAM WOODYARD WAS THE DRUMMER,
301
00:19:48,630 --> 00:19:51,421
AND HE STARTED POUNDING
A LITTLE HEAVIER,
302
00:19:51,547 --> 00:20:01,547
SO THINGS BEGIN TO BUILD UP
TO A REAL FRENZY.
303
00:20:01,672 --> 00:20:03,296
GONSALVES DUG IN,
304
00:20:03,421 --> 00:20:13,213
ONE FURIOUS CHORUS
FOLLOWING ANOTHER.
305
00:20:13,338 --> 00:20:15,338
DUKE CAUGHT THAT SPIRIT.
306
00:20:15,505 --> 00:20:18,505
HE KEPT PLAYING THAT PIANO
AND COMPING AND COMPING
307
00:20:18,630 --> 00:20:24,380
AND KEPT IT GOING
AND KEPT IT GOING.
308
00:20:24,505 --> 00:20:27,380
AND YOU COULD SEE IN HIS FACE
THE JOY AND THE EXCITEMENT.
309
00:20:27,505 --> 00:20:29,380
THIS WAS SOMETHING
THAT NEVER HAPPENED FOR HIM
310
00:20:29,505 --> 00:20:37,005
WITH ALL THE YEARS
HE'D BEEN PLAYING.
311
00:20:37,129 --> 00:20:39,505
THE AUDIENCE
BECAME SO ENTHUSIASTIC
312
00:20:39,630 --> 00:20:42,505
THAT GEORGE WEIN,
AFRAID OF A RIOT,
313
00:20:42,630 --> 00:20:47,672
BEGAN FRANTICALLY
SIGNALING ELLINGTON TO CUT THE NUMBER SHORT.
314
00:20:47,797 --> 00:20:51,672
BUT ELLINGTON REFUSED
TO STOP GONSALVES.
315
00:20:51,797 --> 00:21:05,380
GONSALVES WENT ON PLAYING
FOR 27 CHORUSES.
316
00:21:05,505 --> 00:21:23,505
THE CROWD DEMANDED 4 ENCORES.
317
00:21:23,630 --> 00:21:26,171
PAUL GONSALVES!
318
00:21:26,296 --> 00:21:33,005
PAUL GONSALVES!
319
00:21:33,129 --> 00:21:35,505
A RECORD
OF THE CONCERT
320
00:21:35,630 --> 00:21:38,129
SOLD HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS
OF COPIES,
321
00:21:38,255 --> 00:21:42,755
MORE THAN ANY OTHER RECORD
DUKE ELLINGTON EVER MADE.
322
00:21:42,880 --> 00:21:46,463
EVERY TIME I SAW DUKE
AFTER THAT,
323
00:21:46,588 --> 00:21:48,505
HE WOULD BE TALKING
ABOUT THE INTRODUCTION
324
00:21:48,672 --> 00:21:50,922
OF THE DIMINUENDOAND CRESCENDO IN BLUE.
325
00:21:51,046 --> 00:21:56,005
HE WOULD SAY, "I WAS BORN
AT NEWPORT IN 1956."
326
00:21:56,171 --> 00:21:57,463
LOTS OF LUCK HE WAS "BORN."
327
00:21:57,588 --> 00:21:59,797
HE'D ONLY CREATED
THE WHOLE HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC
328
00:21:59,922 --> 00:22:02,505
PRIOR TO 1956.
329
00:22:02,672 --> 00:22:06,171
BUT THE BAND WAS WORKING MORE.
THEY WERE GETTING MORE MONEY.
330
00:22:06,338 --> 00:22:08,588
PEOPLE WERE CALLING
FOR THE BAND,
331
00:22:08,713 --> 00:22:14,713
AND DUKE FELT A NEW SURGE
IN HIS LIFE.
332
00:23:05,129 --> 00:23:09,505
NOW, MILES DAVIS
BENEFITED FROM THE REACTION
333
00:23:09,630 --> 00:23:13,296
THAT PEOPLE WERE BEGINNING
TO FEEL IN THE 1950s
334
00:23:13,421 --> 00:23:19,421
AGAINST THE SUBURBANIZATION
OF THE UNITED STATES.
335
00:23:19,547 --> 00:23:21,838
YOU KNOW,
A LOT OF MASS PACKAGING
336
00:23:22,005 --> 00:23:26,672
IN A KIND OF A PROJECTION
OF A CERTAIN SUBLIME MEDIOCRITY,
337
00:23:26,797 --> 00:23:28,213
IF YOU WILL.
338
00:23:28,338 --> 00:23:31,213
SO PEOPLE WANTED SOMETHING
THAT WAS ELEGANT
339
00:23:31,338 --> 00:23:33,838
BUT THAT HAD A BITE TO IT.
340
00:23:33,964 --> 00:23:37,380
AFTER MILES DAVIS
HAD KICKED HIS HEROIN HABIT,
341
00:23:37,505 --> 00:23:45,880
HE RESOLVED TO MAKE UP
FOR LOST TIME.
342
00:23:46,005 --> 00:23:49,588
HE WAS UNDER CONTRACT
TO A SMALL LABEL NAMED PRESTIGE
343
00:23:49,713 --> 00:23:52,005
AND RECORDED
A STEADY STREAM OF ALBUMS
344
00:23:52,129 --> 00:23:56,755
WITH GROUP AFTER GROUP
OF GIFTED MUSICIANS--
345
00:23:56,880 --> 00:23:59,171
SONNY ROLLINS,
346
00:23:59,296 --> 00:24:01,838
HORACE SILVER,
347
00:24:01,964 --> 00:24:04,380
MILT JACKSON,
348
00:24:04,505 --> 00:24:06,838
RED GARLAND,
349
00:24:06,964 --> 00:24:09,880
PAUL CHAMBERS,
350
00:24:10,005 --> 00:24:12,463
PHILLY JOE JONES,
351
00:24:12,588 --> 00:24:15,338
CANNONBALL ADDERLEY,
352
00:24:15,463 --> 00:24:35,129
AND A YOUTHFUL VETERAN OF RHYTHM
AND BLUES BANDS--JOHN COLTRANE.
353
00:24:35,255 --> 00:24:38,046
HIS SOUND
BECOMES REALLY CLEAR.
354
00:24:38,171 --> 00:24:39,630
HIS DIRECTION IS CLEAR,
355
00:24:39,755 --> 00:24:42,171
PLAYING THE LONG LINES
WITH A BEAUTIFUL SOUND,
356
00:24:42,296 --> 00:24:43,838
ALWAYS WITH THAT SENSE OF SWING,
357
00:24:43,964 --> 00:24:49,421
BECAUSE HE ALWAYS
COULD REALLY SWING.
358
00:24:49,547 --> 00:24:52,713
AND REAL SWINGING
RHYTHM SECTIONS THAT ARE VERY ORGANIZED.
359
00:24:52,838 --> 00:24:55,797
YOU DON'T HEAR A LOT
OF SLOPPINESS ON HIS RECORDINGS
360
00:24:55,922 --> 00:24:58,505
BECAUSE HE HAS PEOPLE
IN VERY DEFINED ROLES,
361
00:24:58,672 --> 00:25:01,129
AND HIS ALBUMS ARE ALWAYS
GOOD TO STUDY
362
00:25:01,255 --> 00:25:07,672
BECAUSE YOU CAN HEAR
WHAT'S GOING ON AT THAT TIME.
363
00:25:07,797 --> 00:25:09,338
LIKE DUKE ELLINGTON,
364
00:25:09,463 --> 00:25:11,338
DAVIS WAS ALWAYS ABLE
TO INCORPORATE
365
00:25:11,463 --> 00:25:15,713
THE DISTINCTIVE SOUNDS
OF DISPARATE MUSICIANS INTO HIS OWN MUSIC,
366
00:25:15,838 --> 00:25:18,213
LIKE THE SENSE OF SPACE HE HEARD
367
00:25:18,338 --> 00:25:23,463
IN THE WORK OF THE PIANISTS
AHMAD JAMAL AND THELONIOUS MONK.
368
00:25:23,588 --> 00:25:27,296
FROM MONK,
HE LEARNED THAT YOU COULD USE
369
00:25:27,421 --> 00:25:31,380
THE NEW KIND OF HARMONIC IDEAS
THAT HAD ARRIVED,
370
00:25:31,505 --> 00:25:35,755
BUT YOU COULD USE THEM
IN THE SPARE, TELLING WAY
371
00:25:35,880 --> 00:25:38,255
THAT BILLIE HOLIDAY
AND LOUIS ARMSTRONG
372
00:25:38,380 --> 00:25:41,338
AND BLUES SINGERS AND PLAYERS
USED THEIR MATERIAL.
373
00:25:51,797 --> 00:25:55,171
SO YOU DIDN'T NEED TO USE
THE BAROQUE ELEMENTS
374
00:25:55,296 --> 00:25:56,672
THAT YOU GOT IN BOP.
375
00:25:56,797 --> 00:26:05,005
YOU COULD JUST CUT STRAIGHT TO
THE CHASE, AS THE SAYING GOES.
376
00:26:05,129 --> 00:26:06,755
BECAUSE HE LEARNED FROM MONK
377
00:26:06,880 --> 00:26:10,338
THAT WHEREAS ONE GUY
MIGHT PLAY 7 OR 8 NOTES,
378
00:26:10,463 --> 00:26:15,005
MONK MIGHT PLAY 3 OR 2.
379
00:26:15,129 --> 00:26:18,005
BUT THEY'D BE
SO TELLINGLY PLACED
380
00:26:18,129 --> 00:26:21,005
THAT THEY WOULD HAVE
THE SAME IMPACT.
381
00:26:21,129 --> 00:26:32,171
SOMETIMES BIGGER.
382
00:26:32,296 --> 00:26:35,296
HE WAS
THE YOUNG ROMANTIC.
383
00:26:35,421 --> 00:26:37,046
HE WAS A TRUE ROMANTIC.
384
00:26:37,171 --> 00:26:40,838
HE PLAYED BALLADS THE WAY
NOBODY ELSE COULD PLAY THEM.
385
00:26:41,005 --> 00:26:42,380
THEY WEREN'T SENTIMENTALIZED.
386
00:26:42,505 --> 00:26:45,005
THEY WERE BEAUTIFUL,
AND THEY WERE DEEP,
387
00:26:45,171 --> 00:26:47,255
AND THEY DIDN'T REQUIRE
A LOT OF HAND-WRINGING.
388
00:26:47,380 --> 00:26:49,672
AND THEY WERE DIFFERENT
FROM ANYBODY ELSE.
389
00:26:49,838 --> 00:26:52,672
YOU'D HAVE THESE
ALMOST STARK MELODIES
390
00:26:52,838 --> 00:26:55,005
IN A ROMANTIC BALLAD,
391
00:26:55,171 --> 00:27:00,838
AND THE STARKNESS
WOULD MAKE THE ROMANCE ALL THE MORE COMPELLING.
392
00:27:01,005 --> 00:27:10,505
AND HE KNEW THAT.
393
00:27:10,630 --> 00:27:13,129
IT WAS JUST HIM AND THE TRUMPET,
394
00:27:13,255 --> 00:27:16,171
AND YOU WERE FEELING
AS YOU WATCHED AND LISTENED
395
00:27:16,296 --> 00:27:20,838
THAT YOU WERE
SORT OF EAVESDROPPING ON A VERY PRIVATE MOMENT,
396
00:27:20,964 --> 00:27:23,213
AND IT WAS ALMOST AN IMPOSITION
397
00:27:23,338 --> 00:27:27,797
WHEN THE OTHER MUSICIANS
WOULD COME IN.
398
00:27:27,922 --> 00:27:30,630
DAVIS HAD BECOME
A CONSUMMATE PROFESSIONAL,
399
00:27:30,755 --> 00:27:33,338
AND HIS TENDERNESS
WHEN PLAYING LOVE SONGS
400
00:27:33,505 --> 00:27:39,171
HAD BEGUN TO WIN HIM
A WHOLE NEW AUDIENCE.
401
00:27:39,296 --> 00:27:43,046
BUT MILES DAVIS WANTED MORE.
402
00:27:43,171 --> 00:27:45,005
"THE REAL MONEY," HE SAID,
403
00:27:45,129 --> 00:27:48,505
"WAS IN GETTING
TO THE MAINSTREAM OF AMERICA."
404
00:27:48,630 --> 00:27:50,421
HE HAD BEEN RECENTLY SIGNED
405
00:27:50,547 --> 00:27:54,296
BY THE BIGGEST LABEL
IN THE BUSINESS, COLUMBIA RECORDS,
406
00:27:54,421 --> 00:27:57,213
A COMPANY WITH ALL THE RESOURCES
HE WOULD NEED
407
00:27:57,338 --> 00:28:00,380
TO BECOME A BIGGER STAR.
408
00:28:00,505 --> 00:28:03,380
BUT HE COULD NOT BEGIN
TO RECORD FOR COLUMBIA
409
00:28:03,505 --> 00:28:07,005
UNTIL HE HAD PRODUCED
4 FINAL ALBUMS FOR PRESTIGE.
410
00:28:07,129 --> 00:28:10,005
DAVIS WAS SO EAGER TO MOVE ON
411
00:28:10,129 --> 00:28:22,505
THAT HE MANAGED TO MAKE
ALL 4 RECORDS IN 2 DAYS.
412
00:28:22,630 --> 00:28:36,338
NO SECOND TAKES
WERE EVER NEEDED.
413
00:28:36,463 --> 00:28:38,380
MILES' MUSIC APPEALS
414
00:28:38,505 --> 00:28:43,505
TO THE VULNERABLE SIDE
OF PEOPLE.
415
00:28:43,630 --> 00:28:51,005
HIS MUSIC SPEAKS TO
THE SOLITARY PERSON INSIDE OF EACH OF US.
416
00:28:51,129 --> 00:29:04,046
AND IT SOOTHES US IN KNOWING
THAT WE ALL FEEL ALONE.
417
00:29:04,171 --> 00:29:08,505
BUT ON THE OTHER HAND,
HE SWINGS.
418
00:29:08,630 --> 00:29:11,672
AND THIS COMBINATION
OF 2 OPPOSITE THINGS,
419
00:29:11,797 --> 00:29:13,171
YOU PUT THEM TOGETHER,
420
00:29:13,296 --> 00:29:39,296
AND THAT'S A COCKTAIL
THAT IS IRRESISTIBLE.
421
00:29:39,421 --> 00:29:41,005
AT THE ROUGE LOUNGE
ALL THIS WEEK
422
00:29:41,171 --> 00:29:43,463
IS ONE OF THE GREAT JAZZ GROUPS
IN THE COUNTRY TODAY,
423
00:29:43,588 --> 00:29:44,964
AND THAT'S THE
MAX ROACH-CLIFF BROWN ENSEMBLE.
424
00:29:45,088 --> 00:29:47,964
AND WITH US TONIGHT IS
ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING JAZZ TRUMPETERS
425
00:29:48,088 --> 00:29:50,713
IN THE COUNTRY TODAY--
EMARCY RECORDING STAR CLIFFORD BROWN.
426
00:29:58,672 --> 00:30:01,129
IN THE HARD LIVING
WORLD OF JAZZ,
427
00:30:01,255 --> 00:30:04,672
CLIFFORD BROWN STOOD OUT.
428
00:30:04,797 --> 00:30:07,588
DRUGS AND ALCOHOL
DIDN'T INTEREST HIM,
429
00:30:07,713 --> 00:30:09,922
NOR WAS HE TEMPERAMENTAL.
430
00:30:10,046 --> 00:30:13,338
BROWN ROUTINELY
ARRIVED AN HOUR EARLY FOR RECORDING DATES
431
00:30:13,505 --> 00:30:19,713
TO CLEAN HIS HORN
AND READY HIS MIND.
432
00:30:19,838 --> 00:30:22,213
AND HE ALWAYS SEEMED
TO HAVE TIME
433
00:30:22,338 --> 00:30:29,005
FOR YOUNGER PLAYERS
EAGER FOR ADVICE.
434
00:30:29,129 --> 00:30:42,046
HIS ONLY VICE WAS CHESS.
435
00:30:42,171 --> 00:30:45,380
"CLIFFORD WAS A PROFOUND
INFLUENCE ON MY PERSONAL LIFE,"
436
00:30:45,505 --> 00:30:47,255
SONNY ROLLINS REMEMBERED.
437
00:30:47,380 --> 00:30:50,964
"HE SHOWED ME THAT
IT WAS POSSIBLE TO LIVE A GOOD CLEAN LIFE
438
00:30:51,088 --> 00:30:58,630
AND STILL BE
A GOOD JAZZ MUSICIAN."
439
00:30:58,755 --> 00:31:00,922
CLIFFORD BROWN
DIDN'T TAKE ANY DRUGS,
440
00:31:01,046 --> 00:31:02,797
AND HE DIDN'T SMOKE,
AND HE DIDN'T CURSE,
441
00:31:02,922 --> 00:31:05,922
AND HE WAS A, YOU KNOW,
PUREBRED YOUNG MAN.
442
00:31:06,046 --> 00:31:07,797
BUT HE PLAYED
WITH MORE BRILLIANCE
443
00:31:07,922 --> 00:31:10,296
THAN ANYONE WHO HAD COME ALONG
SINCE PARKER,
444
00:31:10,421 --> 00:31:14,338
AND IN A SENSE HE PROVED
THAT IT WASN'T ABOUT DRUGS.
445
00:31:14,463 --> 00:31:17,255
AND IN FACT,
IT HAS OFTEN BEEN SUGGESTED
446
00:31:17,380 --> 00:31:22,046
THAT THE END OF HEROIN'S
SWAY OVER JAZZ
447
00:31:22,171 --> 00:31:24,672
OCCURRED IN THE MIDDLE 1950s
448
00:31:24,838 --> 00:31:27,338
ONE, BECAUSE OF
CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH,
449
00:31:27,505 --> 00:31:31,213
AND 2, BECAUSE OF THE ARRIVAL
OF CLIFFORD BROWN.
450
00:31:34,630 --> 00:31:39,171
AS MUCH AS
HIS FELLOW MUSICIANS ADMIRED BROWN'S CHARACTER,
451
00:31:39,338 --> 00:31:45,505
THEY WERE AWED BY THE WARMTH
AND RICHNESS OF HIS TONE...
452
00:31:45,630 --> 00:31:48,171
AND THE LONG, MELODIC
DANCING LINES
453
00:31:48,338 --> 00:32:05,838
THAT SEEMED TO FLOW EFFORTLESSLY
FROM HIS HORN.
454
00:32:05,964 --> 00:32:08,547
I LOVE
CLIFFORD BROWN'S PLAYING.
455
00:32:08,672 --> 00:32:12,046
IT'S SOME OF THE WARMEST PLAYING
ON ANY INSTRUMENT
456
00:32:12,171 --> 00:32:16,713
THAT'S BEEN RECORDED IN JAZZ.
457
00:32:16,838 --> 00:32:20,171
THE PASSION THAT HE PLAYED
HIS LINES WITH, YOU KNOW?
458
00:32:20,296 --> 00:32:24,171
HE CREATED, WHEN I SAY LINES,
I MEAN HIS PHRASES, YOU KNOW,
459
00:32:24,296 --> 00:32:37,129
THE WAY THEY UNFOLDED
AND KIND OF JUST OOZED OUT OF HIS HORN.
460
00:32:37,255 --> 00:32:38,547
IN 1954,
461
00:32:38,672 --> 00:32:42,547
HE HAD JOINED FORCES
WITH THE BRILLIANT DRUMMER MAX ROACH.
462
00:32:42,672 --> 00:32:44,547
FOR MORE THAN 2 YEARS,
463
00:32:44,672 --> 00:32:49,880
THEIR QUINTET WAS ONE OF
THE MOST INNOVATIVE IN JAZZ.
464
00:32:50,005 --> 00:32:53,171
AND IT SEEMED TO MANY
THAT CLIFFORD BROWN WAS DESTINED
465
00:32:53,296 --> 00:32:56,880
TO JOIN THE RANKS
OF THE GREATEST OF ALL TRUMPET PLAYERS--
466
00:32:57,005 --> 00:33:02,838
LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
DIZZY GILLESPIE, MILES DAVIS.
467
00:33:08,380 --> 00:33:10,171
THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
468
00:33:10,338 --> 00:33:14,505
YOU'VE MADE ME FEEL
SO WONDERFUL.
469
00:33:18,964 --> 00:33:22,880
ON THE EVENING
OF MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1956,
470
00:33:23,005 --> 00:33:26,880
AT THE END OF
A RARE DAY OFF SPENT WITH HIS WIFE AND INFANT SON,
471
00:33:27,005 --> 00:33:34,005
BROWN TOOK PART IN A JAM SESSION
IN PHILADELPHIA.
472
00:33:34,171 --> 00:33:36,588
HE HADN'T REALLY WANTED
TO BE THERE,
473
00:33:36,713 --> 00:33:42,838
BUT CHARACTERISTICALLY,
HE WAS DOING A FAVOR FOR A FRIEND.
474
00:33:42,964 --> 00:33:45,713
NOW HE WOULD BE FORCED
TO DRIVE THROUGH THE NIGHT
475
00:33:45,838 --> 00:33:55,005
TO GET TO HIS NEXT GIG
IN CHICAGO.
476
00:33:55,129 --> 00:33:56,672
IT WAS AFTER MIDNIGHT
477
00:33:56,838 --> 00:34:03,171
BEFORE BROWN AND THE PIANIST
RICHIE POWELL FINISHED PLAYING.
478
00:34:03,296 --> 00:34:06,213
THEY TOOK OFF
IN POWELL'S NEW CAR
479
00:34:06,338 --> 00:34:09,171
WITH POWELL'S WIFE NANCY
AT THE WHEEL.
480
00:34:09,296 --> 00:34:11,547
IT BEGAN TO RAIN.
481
00:34:11,672 --> 00:34:15,213
SUDDENLY, THE CAR SKIDDED
OUT OF CONTROL,
482
00:34:15,338 --> 00:34:20,672
FLEW OVER AN EMBANKMENT,
AND TURNED OVER.
483
00:34:20,797 --> 00:34:31,171
ALL 3 PASSENGERS
WERE KILLED INSTANTLY.
484
00:34:31,296 --> 00:34:33,838
DIZZY GILLESPIE WAS
ABOUT TO GO ONSTAGE
485
00:34:34,005 --> 00:34:36,046
AT THE APOLLO THEATER IN HARLEM
486
00:34:36,171 --> 00:34:42,005
WHEN HIS MEN HEARD THE NEWS
THAT CLIFFORD BROWN WAS DEAD.
487
00:34:42,129 --> 00:34:44,005
WHEN THE CURTAIN ROSE,
488
00:34:44,129 --> 00:34:49,505
MOST OF THE MUSICIANS
WERE IN TEARS.
489
00:34:49,672 --> 00:34:52,338
"FOR HIS ARTISTRY,"
GILLESPIE SAID,
490
00:34:52,463 --> 00:35:10,255
"THERE CAN BE NO REPLACEMENT."
491
00:35:10,380 --> 00:35:15,630
♪♪ I DON'T KNOW WHY ♪♪
492
00:35:15,755 --> 00:35:24,838
♪♪ BUT I'M FEELIN' SO SAD ♪♪
493
00:35:24,964 --> 00:35:28,964
♪♪ I LONG TO TRY ♪♪
494
00:35:29,088 --> 00:35:34,838
♪♪ SOMETHING I'VE NEVER HAD♪
495
00:35:35,004 --> 00:35:39,838
♪♪ NEVER HAD NO KISSIN' ♪♪
496
00:35:39,964 --> 00:35:44,838
♪♪ OH, WHAT I'VE BEEN MISSIN' ♪♪
497
00:35:45,004 --> 00:35:50,088
♪♪ LOVER MAN,
OH, WHERE CAN YOU BE? ♪♪
498
00:35:50,213 --> 00:35:54,588
SARAH VAUGHAN
IS MY FAVORITE SINGER.
499
00:35:54,713 --> 00:35:59,046
♪♪ THE NIGHT
IS SO COLD ♪♪
500
00:35:59,171 --> 00:36:03,088
♪♪ AND I'M SO ALL ALONE... ♪
501
00:36:03,213 --> 00:36:06,004
SHE HAD
THE MOST ASTONISHING RANGE
502
00:36:06,171 --> 00:36:08,296
OF ANY JAZZ SINGER.
503
00:36:08,421 --> 00:36:11,797
SHE WAS EXTREMELY SOPHISTICATED
HARMONICALLY--
504
00:36:11,922 --> 00:36:15,004
I MEAN IN THE WAY
THAT CHARLIE PARKER AND DIZZY GILLESPIE
505
00:36:15,171 --> 00:36:18,088
AND ALL THE GREAT
INSTRUMENTALISTS OF BOP WERE.
506
00:36:18,213 --> 00:36:20,463
PEOPLE MAKE THE MISTAKE
OF CALLING HER OPERATIC
507
00:36:20,588 --> 00:36:21,964
AND SAYING THAT
IF SHE WANTED TO,
508
00:36:22,088 --> 00:36:23,588
SHE COULD HAVE BEEN
AN OPERA SINGER,
509
00:36:23,713 --> 00:36:25,713
AND I THINK THEY'RE
ENTIRELY MISSING THE POINT.
510
00:36:25,838 --> 00:36:27,213
SHE HAD THE RANGE,
511
00:36:27,338 --> 00:36:29,713
BUT SHE HAD NO INTEREST
IN THAT KIND OF SINGING.
512
00:36:29,838 --> 00:36:31,505
HER WHOLE APPROACH TO PHRASING
513
00:36:31,630 --> 00:36:33,922
IS MUCH MORE ORIENTED AROUND
THE CHURCH AND AROUND JAZZ.
514
00:36:34,046 --> 00:36:38,046
♪♪ I'VE HEARD IT SAID ♪
515
00:36:38,171 --> 00:36:43,713
♪♪ THAT THE THRILL OF ROMANCE ♪♪
516
00:36:43,838 --> 00:36:46,964
♪♪ CAN BE ♪♪
517
00:36:47,088 --> 00:36:51,088
♪♪ LIKE A HEAVENLY DREAM ♪♪
518
00:36:51,213 --> 00:36:52,463
THE TONE OF HER VOICE,
519
00:36:52,588 --> 00:36:54,421
THE RICHNESS OF HER VOICE...
520
00:36:54,547 --> 00:36:58,004
♪♪ I GO TO BED ♪♪
521
00:36:58,171 --> 00:37:00,004
...FOR ME,
WAS OTHERWORLDLY.
522
00:37:00,171 --> 00:37:02,004
♪♪ WITH A PRAYER ♪♪
523
00:37:02,129 --> 00:37:05,505
I FELT I LEFT MY BODY WHEN
I LISTENED TO SARAH VAUGHAN.
524
00:37:05,672 --> 00:37:09,505
♪♪ ...LOVE TO ME ♪♪
525
00:37:09,630 --> 00:37:14,505
♪♪ STRANGE AS IT SEEMS ♪♪
526
00:37:14,630 --> 00:37:16,004
CHOPS LIKE
YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE.
527
00:37:16,129 --> 00:37:18,004
ANOTHER ONE OF THOSE VOCALISTS
528
00:37:18,129 --> 00:37:21,046
WHO CAN STAND RIGHT NEXT
TO AN INSTRUMENTALIST
529
00:37:21,171 --> 00:37:24,338
AND DELIVER
WITH AS MUCH DEXTERITY
530
00:37:24,463 --> 00:37:27,713
AND WITH AS MUCH CLARITY
531
00:37:27,838 --> 00:37:36,505
AS ANY INSTRUMENTALIST
OF HER TIME.
532
00:37:36,630 --> 00:37:40,046
SARAH VAUGHAN
SAW HERSELF AS A MUSICIAN
533
00:37:40,171 --> 00:37:41,880
RATHER THAN A SINGER.
534
00:37:42,004 --> 00:37:45,171
SHE WAS A GIFTED PIANIST
IN HER OWN RIGHT,
535
00:37:45,338 --> 00:37:47,964
AND WHEN SHE CLOSED HER EYES
ONSTAGE, SHE SAID,
536
00:37:48,088 --> 00:37:50,588
SHE COULD SEE--AND SING--
537
00:37:50,713 --> 00:37:54,588
LINES THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
IMPROVISED ON THE PIANO.
538
00:37:54,713 --> 00:37:59,338
MUSICIANS LOVED HER
FOR HER PERFECT PITCH AND RHYTHMIC SENSE,
539
00:37:59,463 --> 00:38:02,171
HER SOPHISTICATED EAR
FOR CHORD CHANGES,
540
00:38:02,296 --> 00:38:04,255
AND HER ASTONISHING VOICE.
541
00:38:04,380 --> 00:38:09,046
SHE COULD SING EVERYTHING
FROM SOPRANO TO BARITONE.
542
00:38:09,171 --> 00:38:12,046
THEY CALLED HER "SAILOR"
AT FIRST
543
00:38:12,171 --> 00:38:14,838
FOR THE RICHNESS
OF HER VOCABULARY
544
00:38:14,964 --> 00:38:19,672
AND HER FONDNESS FOR GOOD TIMES.
545
00:38:19,797 --> 00:38:24,088
LATER, SHE BECAME KNOWN
AS "SASSY."
546
00:38:24,213 --> 00:38:27,129
"SASSY," DIZZY GILLESPIE
ONCE SAID,
547
00:38:27,255 --> 00:38:31,922
"CAN SING NOTES
OTHER PEOPLE CAN'T EVEN HEAR."
548
00:38:32,046 --> 00:38:36,004
♪♪ THE WAY YOU WEAR
YOUR HAT ♪♪
549
00:38:36,171 --> 00:38:39,922
♪♪ THE WAY YOU SIP YOUR TEA♪
550
00:38:40,046 --> 00:38:43,672
♪♪ THE MEMORY OF ALL THAT ♪♪
551
00:38:43,838 --> 00:38:47,421
♪♪ NO, NO, THEY CAN'T
TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME ♪♪
552
00:38:47,547 --> 00:38:49,922
HARMONICALLY, MELODICALLY,
553
00:38:50,046 --> 00:38:51,838
THIS WOMAN CAN DO ANYTHING.
554
00:38:51,964 --> 00:38:55,129
SHE WAS ALWAYS
AN EXPERIMENTALIST.
555
00:38:55,255 --> 00:38:58,838
♪♪ THE WAY
YOU HAUNT MY DREAMS ♪♪
556
00:38:58,964 --> 00:39:00,630
YOU HEAR
557
00:39:00,755 --> 00:39:04,505
WHEN SHE'S JUST UTTERLY
ENJOYING HERSELF MUSICALLY.
558
00:39:04,630 --> 00:39:08,505
YOU HEAR HER VERY COMPLICATED
RELATIONSHIP TO LYRICS,
559
00:39:08,630 --> 00:39:11,463
THE WAY SHE WILL
DISTANCE THEM OFTEN
560
00:39:11,588 --> 00:39:14,171
AND PLAY WITH THEM, PARODY THEM,
561
00:39:14,338 --> 00:39:15,755
CLAIM TO FORGET THE WORDS,
562
00:39:15,880 --> 00:39:18,630
WHICH I'M NOT AT ALL CONVINCED
SHE ALWAYS FORGOT,
563
00:39:18,755 --> 00:39:20,046
YOU KNOW, AND SUBSTITUTE SCAT.
564
00:39:20,171 --> 00:39:24,547
I THINK ALL OF THAT BESPEAKS
A CHAFING AT THE BOUNDARIES
565
00:39:24,672 --> 00:39:27,088
OF THE POPULAR SONG
AS A JAZZ MUSICIAN.
566
00:39:27,213 --> 00:39:28,338
♪♪ ...AWAY FROM ME ♪♪
567
00:39:28,463 --> 00:39:31,880
♪♪ THE WAY YOUR SMILE
JUST BEAMS ♪♪
568
00:39:32,004 --> 00:39:35,338
♪♪ THE WAY YOU SING OFF-KEY,
KEY, KEY ♪♪
569
00:39:35,463 --> 00:39:39,171
♪♪ THE WAY YOU HAUNT MY DREAMS ♪
570
00:39:39,296 --> 00:39:44,630
♪♪ NO, NO, CAN'T TAKE THAT
AWAY FROM ME ♪♪
571
00:39:44,755 --> 00:40:02,004
♪♪ CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME♪
572
00:40:02,129 --> 00:40:04,630
I'M LOOKING FOR
A BOY SINGER.
573
00:40:04,755 --> 00:40:08,672
I'D LIKE TO GET
A YOUNG SINGER FOR MY BAND, YOU KNOW.
574
00:40:08,838 --> 00:40:10,672
A YOUNG, YOUNG SINGER?
575
00:40:10,838 --> 00:40:12,255
YEAH,
A YOUNG SINGER.
576
00:40:12,380 --> 00:40:13,672
I'D LIKE TO.
577
00:40:13,838 --> 00:40:16,505
I DON'T THINK YOU
HAVE TO GO ANY FURTHER.
578
00:40:16,672 --> 00:40:20,088
WELL, WHO IS IT?
579
00:40:20,213 --> 00:40:21,630
YOU?
580
00:40:21,755 --> 00:40:24,004
AHH, YOU KILL ME,
DADDY!
581
00:40:24,129 --> 00:40:26,004
HE DID NOT
DISTINGUISH
582
00:40:26,129 --> 00:40:28,505
BETWEEN BEING AN ARTIST
AND BEING AN ENTERTAINER.
583
00:40:28,630 --> 00:40:31,505
SINCE YOU, UH,
BROUGHT MEMORIES TO MY MEMORY,
584
00:40:31,630 --> 00:40:33,129
LOOK HERE, UH...
585
00:40:33,255 --> 00:40:35,004
HE WAS
A GREAT ARTIST,
586
00:40:35,129 --> 00:40:37,672
BUT HE WAS THERE
TO ENTERTAIN YOU.
587
00:40:37,838 --> 00:40:42,213
HE WASN'T OFFERING HIS ART
AS, YOU KNOW, HOMEWORK.
588
00:40:42,338 --> 00:40:44,672
IT WASN'T FOR 4 CREDITS.
589
00:40:44,797 --> 00:40:45,922
IT WAS TO HAVE FUN.
590
00:40:46,046 --> 00:40:47,421
LOOK AT
DADDY MITCH.
591
00:40:47,547 --> 00:40:49,505
DRAPE IT ON US
THERE, DADDY.
592
00:40:51,547 --> 00:40:53,505
YEAH. WE'RE
GOING NOW.
593
00:40:53,630 --> 00:40:55,672
♪♪ TALK TO ME, BABY ♪♪
594
00:40:55,797 --> 00:40:58,838
♪♪ WHISPER IN MY EAR ♪♪
595
00:40:59,004 --> 00:41:01,004
♪♪ TALK TO ME, BABY ♪♪
596
00:41:01,129 --> 00:41:04,463
♪♪ WHISPER IN MY EAR ♪♪
597
00:41:04,588 --> 00:41:06,338
HE COULD BE
ALMOST LIKE A VAUDEVILLIAN
598
00:41:06,463 --> 00:41:10,171
AND DO A KIND OF A LOW HUMOR
ROUTINE WITH VELMA MIDDLETON.
599
00:41:10,296 --> 00:41:12,880
HE COULD JOKE
WITH THE MUSICIANS, WITH THE AUDIENCE.
600
00:41:13,004 --> 00:41:14,755
HE COULD TELL
SLIGHTLY OFF-COLOR STORIES.
601
00:41:14,880 --> 00:41:16,838
AND THEN HE COULD
PICK UP THE TRUMPET
602
00:41:16,964 --> 00:41:19,338
AND PLAY SOMETHING THAT WOULD
BRING TEARS TO YOUR EYES.
603
00:41:19,463 --> 00:41:20,755
HE DID NOT DISTINGUISH,
604
00:41:20,880 --> 00:41:23,463
AND THIS DROVE
A LOT OF PEOPLE NUTS.
605
00:41:23,588 --> 00:41:28,255
A LOT OF PEOPLE WISHED
THAT HE HAD JUST, YOU KNOW, NEVER RECORDED POP TUNES.
606
00:41:28,380 --> 00:41:32,380
HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN ON
SOME KIND OF IVORY TOWER,
607
00:41:32,505 --> 00:41:34,338
OCCASIONALLY SENDING FORTH
A RECORDING
608
00:41:34,463 --> 00:41:36,171
OR APPEARING IN CARNEGIE HALL.
609
00:41:36,296 --> 00:41:38,107
THAT'S NOT LOUIS ARMSTRONG.
610
00:42:09,588 --> 00:42:11,463
♪♪ OH, THERE'S DIMPLES
ON HER ELBOWS... ♪♪
611
00:42:11,588 --> 00:42:13,463
THERE WAS
SOMETHING ABOUT ARMSTRONG
612
00:42:13,588 --> 00:42:15,964
THAT SEEMED TO BE
A CERTAIN KIND OF SHADOW
613
00:42:16,088 --> 00:42:18,171
OF A CERTAIN KIND
OF MINSTRELSY,
614
00:42:18,296 --> 00:42:23,338
AND I BELIEVE IT MADE
A LOT OF BLACK PEOPLE UNCOMFORTABLE.
615
00:42:23,463 --> 00:42:25,338
THEN, TOO, HIS MUSIC,
616
00:42:25,463 --> 00:42:27,838
HE HAD MADE CERTAIN
KIND OF ADAPTATIONS
617
00:42:27,964 --> 00:42:29,838
IN HIS MUSIC FOR POPULAR TASTE
618
00:42:29,964 --> 00:42:32,338
BUT NOT SIGNIFICANT
ADAPTATIONS IN HIS MUSIC
619
00:42:32,463 --> 00:42:33,838
FOR BLACK POPULAR TASTE.
620
00:42:36,088 --> 00:42:39,338
ARMSTRONG JUST REALLY
DIDN'T SEEM TO BE SPEAKING
621
00:42:39,463 --> 00:42:41,338
TO THAT COMMUNITY ANYMORE...
622
00:42:43,838 --> 00:42:47,547
AND I BELIEVE THAT'S
WHY HE HAD SUCH TROUBLE WITH BLACK PEOPLE
623
00:42:47,672 --> 00:42:48,922
IN THE FIFTIES AND SIXTIES.
624
00:42:49,046 --> 00:42:51,004
♪♪ YEAH, KOKEY ♪
625
00:42:51,129 --> 00:42:52,004
♪♪ KOKEY ♪♪
626
00:42:52,129 --> 00:42:53,004
♪♪ KO KO MO ♪♪
627
00:42:56,505 --> 00:42:58,588
♪♪ OH, YEAH ♪♪
♪♪ OH, YEAH♪
628
00:43:00,713 --> 00:43:07,171
HA HA HA!
629
00:43:07,296 --> 00:43:11,505
WHAT HE DID,
WHAT HE PLAYED CAME FROM WITHIN.
630
00:43:11,672 --> 00:43:13,964
IT CAME FROM, UH...
631
00:43:14,088 --> 00:43:17,505
IT CAME FROM HIS OWN HEART,
FROM HIS MIND,
632
00:43:17,630 --> 00:43:21,630
WHERE IT WASN'T
ANYTHING CONTRIVED.
633
00:43:21,755 --> 00:43:23,588
IT WAS HIM.
634
00:43:23,713 --> 00:43:26,088
IT WAS LOUIS,
WHAT HE WAS,
635
00:43:26,213 --> 00:43:28,088
THE ESSENCE OF HIS BEING.
636
00:43:28,213 --> 00:43:29,797
THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE.
637
00:43:29,922 --> 00:43:32,338
HE WAS A COMPLETELY HONEST MAN--
638
00:43:32,505 --> 00:43:36,630
MUSICALLY AND IN EVERY OTHER WAY
THAT I KNEW ABOUT.
639
00:43:46,838 --> 00:43:50,088
ON SEPTEMBER 9, 1957,
640
00:43:50,213 --> 00:43:54,004
LOUIS ARMSTRONG WAS
ABOUT TO GO ONSTAGE IN GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA,
641
00:43:54,171 --> 00:43:57,129
WHEN HE SAW ON TELEVISION
A CROWD OF WHITES
642
00:43:57,255 --> 00:43:59,463
JEERING AT BLACK CHILDREN
643
00:43:59,588 --> 00:44:05,630
WHO WERE TRYING TO ENTER
CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL IN LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS.
644
00:44:05,755 --> 00:44:09,713
ORVAL FAUBUS, THE STATE'S
SEGREGATIONIST GOVERNOR,
645
00:44:09,838 --> 00:44:12,338
DEFIED THE UNITED STATES
SUPREME COURT
646
00:44:12,505 --> 00:44:16,255
AND ORDERED IN ARKANSAS
NATIONAL GUARDSMEN WITH DRAWN BAYONETS
647
00:44:16,380 --> 00:44:20,338
TO KEEP THE STUDENTS OUT.
648
00:44:20,463 --> 00:44:22,255
ARMSTRONG WAS OUTRAGED.
649
00:44:22,380 --> 00:44:26,505
HE HAD JUST BEEN ASKED TO
UNDERTAKE A GOODWILL TOUR OF THE SOVIET UNION
650
00:44:26,630 --> 00:44:28,004
FOR THE STATE DEPARTMENT.
651
00:44:28,129 --> 00:44:31,505
JAZZ HAD ALWAYS BEEN
A SYMBOL OF AMERICAN FREEDOM,
652
00:44:31,630 --> 00:44:35,088
AND ARMSTRONG WOULD BE
THE FIRST AMERICAN JAZZ ARTIST
653
00:44:35,213 --> 00:44:38,171
TO APPEAR
BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN.
654
00:44:38,296 --> 00:44:42,838
NOW WITH LITTLE ROCK,
HE WAS RELUCTANT TO GO.
655
00:44:42,964 --> 00:44:44,838
WHAT ARE YOU
GOING TO TELL THE RUSSIANS
656
00:44:44,964 --> 00:44:46,171
WHEN THEY ASK
YOU ABOUT
657
00:44:46,296 --> 00:44:47,380
THE LITTLE ROCK
INCIDENT?
658
00:44:47,505 --> 00:44:49,964
IT ALL DEPENDS WHAT TIME
THEY SEND ME OVER THERE.
659
00:44:50,088 --> 00:44:51,838
I DON'T THINK
THEY SHOULD SEND ME NOW
660
00:44:51,964 --> 00:44:53,838
UNLESS THEY STRAIGHTEN
THAT MESS DOWN SOUTH.
661
00:44:53,964 --> 00:44:54,838
AND FOR GOOD.
662
00:44:54,964 --> 00:44:56,880
I MEAN, NOT JUST
TO BLOW OVER.
663
00:44:57,004 --> 00:44:58,463
TO CUT IT OUT, I THINK.
664
00:44:58,588 --> 00:45:02,004
BECAUSE THEY'VE BEEN
IGNORING THE CONSTITUTION,
665
00:45:02,129 --> 00:45:04,129
ALTHOUGH THEY'RE
TAUGHT IT IN SCHOOL.
666
00:45:04,255 --> 00:45:07,004
BUT WHEN THEY GO HOME,
THEIR PARENTS TELL THEM DIFFERENT,
667
00:45:07,129 --> 00:45:09,004
SAY, "YOU DON'T HAVE
TO ABIDE BY IT
668
00:45:09,129 --> 00:45:11,505
"BECAUSE WE'VE BEEN
GETTING AWAY WITH IT A HUNDRED YEARS,
669
00:45:11,630 --> 00:45:14,004
"SO, UH, NOBODY
TELLS ON EACH OTHER.
670
00:45:14,129 --> 00:45:15,505
SO DON'T BOTHER WITH IT."
671
00:45:15,630 --> 00:45:18,505
SO IF THEY ASK ME WHAT'S
HAPPENING IF I GO NOW,
672
00:45:18,672 --> 00:45:20,505
I CAN'T TELL A LIE.
THAT'S ONE THING.
673
00:45:20,630 --> 00:45:24,588
AND I WASN'T LYING,
THE WAY I FEEL ABOUT IT.
674
00:45:24,713 --> 00:45:27,547
ARMSTRONG
CANCELED THE TOUR.
675
00:45:27,672 --> 00:45:30,630
"THE WAY THEY'RE TREATING
MY PEOPLE IN THE SOUTH,"
676
00:45:30,755 --> 00:45:34,213
HE TOLD A REPORTER,
"THE GOVERNMENT CAN GO TO HELL.
677
00:45:34,338 --> 00:45:38,547
IT'S GETTING SO BAD, A COLORED
MAN HASN'T GOT ANY COUNTRY."
678
00:45:38,672 --> 00:45:43,004
ARMSTRONG'S WHITE ROAD MANAGER
WAS APPALLED,
679
00:45:43,171 --> 00:45:45,630
AFRAID HE HAD RUINED HIS CAREER.
680
00:45:45,755 --> 00:45:49,838
HE SAID, "LOUIS ARMSTRONG
NEVER SAID NOTHING LIKE THAT,"
681
00:45:49,964 --> 00:45:52,255
BECAUSE HE'S THINKING ABOUT
THOSE BIG FEES, YOU KNOW?
682
00:45:52,380 --> 00:45:54,672
HE SAID, "LOUIS ARMSTRONG
NEVER SAID ANYTHING ABOUT THAT.
683
00:45:54,838 --> 00:45:56,421
HE DIDN'T SAY
ANYTHING LIKE THAT."
684
00:45:56,547 --> 00:45:57,922
LOUIS SAID, "YES I DID.
685
00:45:58,046 --> 00:46:01,547
"I MEANT IT, AND I'LL STAND BY
UNTIL MY DYING DAY.
686
00:46:01,672 --> 00:46:05,338
"ALL I ASK IS THAT THEY
TAKE THOSE LITTLE KIDS INTO THE SCHOOL.
687
00:46:05,505 --> 00:46:07,672
WHY CAN'T THEY GO TO SCHOOL?"
688
00:46:07,838 --> 00:46:11,129
AND HE HAD SOME
VERY DARK WORDS FOR FAUBUS.
689
00:46:11,255 --> 00:46:13,129
HE CALLED HIM
AN UNEDUCATED PLOWBOY,
690
00:46:13,255 --> 00:46:14,672
AND HE CRITICIZED EISENHOWER
691
00:46:14,797 --> 00:46:17,547
FOR NOT GOING DOWN THERE
AND TAKING, YOU KNOW,
692
00:46:17,672 --> 00:46:19,713
THAT LITTLE BLACK GIRL
IN HIS HAND
693
00:46:19,838 --> 00:46:21,672
AND MARCHING HER
INTO THAT SCHOOL.
694
00:46:21,838 --> 00:46:25,463
WELL...FROM ANY BLACK
ENTERTAINER AT THAT TIME,
695
00:46:25,588 --> 00:46:26,964
THAT WAS POWERFUL STUFF.
696
00:46:27,088 --> 00:46:28,421
BUT FROM LOUIS ARMSTRONG?
697
00:46:28,547 --> 00:46:33,797
NO OTHER JAZZ MUSICIAN
SPOKE OUT SO FORCEFULLY.
698
00:46:33,922 --> 00:46:38,630
NOW CRITICS, BOTH BLACK
AND WHITE, ATTACKED HIM.
699
00:46:38,755 --> 00:46:43,547
EDITORIALS CALLED
FOR A BOYCOTT OF HIS CONCERTS.
700
00:46:43,672 --> 00:46:55,505
LOUIS ARMSTRONG
WOULDN'T BACK DOWN.
701
00:46:55,630 --> 00:46:57,338
BUT THE CONTROVERSY--
702
00:46:57,505 --> 00:46:59,964
AND THE KILLING SCHEDULE
OF ONE-NIGHTERS
703
00:47:00,088 --> 00:47:01,964
ARMSTRONG ALWAYS
INSISTED ON KEEPING--
704
00:47:02,088 --> 00:47:03,964
EVENTUALLY TOOK ITS TOLL.
705
00:47:04,088 --> 00:47:08,797
IN THE SUMMER OF 1959,
ON TOUR IN ITALY,
706
00:47:08,922 --> 00:47:10,547
HE SUDDENLY COLLAPSED
707
00:47:10,672 --> 00:47:21,004
WITH WHAT WAS LATER DIAGNOSED
AS A HEART ATTACK.
708
00:47:21,129 --> 00:47:23,004
ARMSTRONG TOLD THE PRESS
709
00:47:23,129 --> 00:47:25,338
THAT HIS OLD FRIEND
BIX BEIDERBECKE
710
00:47:25,505 --> 00:47:29,171
HAD TRIED TO ENLIST HIM
FOR GABRIEL'S BAND.
711
00:47:29,296 --> 00:47:30,547
ABOUT 2 DAYS AGO,
712
00:47:30,672 --> 00:47:32,338
THEY PRACTICALLY HAD YOU
IN THE CEMETERY.
713
00:47:32,463 --> 00:47:34,380
NO, IT MUST HAVE BEEN
LONGER THAN THAT.
714
00:47:34,505 --> 00:47:35,838
IT MUST HAVE BEEN LONGER
THAN THAT.
715
00:47:35,964 --> 00:47:38,338
THE TROUBLE WAS THAT
SIDNEY BECHET AND BIX
716
00:47:38,463 --> 00:47:40,838
TRIED TO GET ME UP THERE
TO PLAY FIRST CHAIR,
717
00:47:40,964 --> 00:47:42,505
BUT I DIDN'T WANT TO.
718
00:47:42,630 --> 00:47:46,004
THEY DIDN'T WANT
TO PAY ME NOTHING BUT UNION SCALE, SO...
719
00:47:46,129 --> 00:47:49,004
YOU DIDN'T HEAR GABRIEL
BLOWING HIS HORN, DID YOU, LOUIS?
720
00:47:49,129 --> 00:47:51,505
WELL, I DIDN'T
GET THAT FAR, SEE WHAT I'M SAYING?
721
00:47:51,630 --> 00:47:54,380
HE WAS BACK
PLAYING AGAIN 2 WEEKS LATER.
722
00:48:12,922 --> 00:48:17,296
LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
TO ME, IS A SMILE,
723
00:48:17,421 --> 00:48:22,797
A HANDKERCHIEF, AND SWEAT...
724
00:48:22,922 --> 00:48:34,713
AND THE CAPACITY TO MOVE ME
ABOVE AND BEYOND TEARS.
725
00:48:34,838 --> 00:48:38,421
I WAS WORKING ON A FILM CALLEDA MAN CALLED ADAM,
726
00:48:38,547 --> 00:48:41,171
WHICH STARRED SAMMY DAVIS JR.
727
00:48:41,296 --> 00:48:44,505
LOUIS ARMSTRONG
WAS ALSO IN THE PICTURE.
728
00:48:44,630 --> 00:48:47,713
ONE DAY AT LUNCH,
EVERYBODY HAD GONE OUT.
729
00:48:47,838 --> 00:48:50,755
THE SET WAS QUIET.
730
00:48:50,880 --> 00:48:54,046
AS I CAME BACK TOWARD THE SET,
I LOOKED UP,
731
00:48:54,171 --> 00:48:57,755
AND THERE WAS LOUIS ARMSTRONG
SITTING IN A CHAIR,
732
00:48:57,880 --> 00:49:00,255
THE HANDKERCHIEF
TIED AROUND HIS HEAD,
733
00:49:00,380 --> 00:49:04,046
LOOKING UP
WITH THE SADDEST EXPRESSION
734
00:49:04,171 --> 00:49:06,964
I'VE EVER SEEN
ON A MAN'S FACE.
735
00:49:07,088 --> 00:49:09,338
I LOOKED,
AND I WAS STARTLED,
736
00:49:09,505 --> 00:49:12,838
AND THEN I STARTED TO
BACK AWAY BECAUSE IT SEEMED SUCH A PRIVATE MOMENT.
737
00:49:13,004 --> 00:49:15,672
BUT HE HEARD ME BACKING
AWAY, AND HE BROKE OUT OF IT RIGHT AWAY.
738
00:49:15,797 --> 00:49:17,129
"HEY, POPS, HEY.
739
00:49:17,255 --> 00:49:20,088
"LOOKS LIKE THESE CATS ARE GOING
TO STARVE OLD LOUIS TO DEATH.
740
00:49:20,213 --> 00:49:22,004
HEY, MAN, WOW,"
AND EVERYTHING, YOU KNOW.
741
00:49:22,171 --> 00:49:26,004
I WENT INTO IT WITH HIM,
BUT I NEVER FORGOT THAT LOOK.
742
00:49:26,171 --> 00:49:28,505
AND IT CHANGED MY CONCEPT
OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
743
00:49:28,672 --> 00:49:30,505
BECAUSE I, TOO, AS A BOY
744
00:49:30,672 --> 00:49:32,672
HAD OBJECTED TO A LOT
OF WHAT LOUIS WAS DOING.
745
00:49:32,797 --> 00:49:35,505
I FIGURED ALL THEM TEETH
AND ALL THAT HANDKERCHIEF--
746
00:49:35,672 --> 00:49:37,088
WE CALLED IT "OOFTAH,"
747
00:49:37,213 --> 00:49:38,672
BY THAT WHICH WE MEANT,
748
00:49:38,797 --> 00:49:41,004
YOU DO THAT TO PLEASE
THE WHITE FOLKS, DON'T YOU?
749
00:49:41,171 --> 00:49:43,004
YOU MAKE THEM HAPPY
AND ALL THAT STUFF.
750
00:49:43,171 --> 00:49:44,880
YOU MAKE US LOOK LIKE FOOLS.
751
00:49:45,004 --> 00:49:48,129
BUT IT WAS ONLY THEN
I BEGAN TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING ABOUT LOUIS.
752
00:49:48,255 --> 00:49:51,380
HE COULD PUT ON THAT SHOW,
HE COULD DO THAT WHOLE THING,
753
00:49:51,505 --> 00:49:54,880
BECAUSE IN THAT HORN OF HIS,
YOU KNOW,
754
00:49:55,004 --> 00:50:00,880
HE HAD THE POWER TO KILL.
755
00:50:01,004 --> 00:50:04,838
THAT HORN COULD KILL A MAN.
756
00:50:04,964 --> 00:50:09,547
SO THERE WAS WHERE THE TRUTH
OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG RESIDED.
757
00:50:09,672 --> 00:50:11,922
WHATEVER HE WAS...
758
00:50:12,046 --> 00:50:15,421
THE MOMENT HE PUT THE TRUMPET
TO HIS LIPS,
759
00:50:15,547 --> 00:50:18,463
A NEW TRUTH EMERGED,
A NEW MAN EMERGED,
760
00:50:18,588 --> 00:50:36,046
A NEW POWER EMERGED.
761
00:50:36,171 --> 00:50:40,505
AND I LOOKED ON LOUIS
FOR WHAT HE TRULY WAS AFTER THAT.
762
00:50:40,630 --> 00:50:57,713
HE BECAME AN ANGELIC PRESENCE
TO ME AFTER THAT MOMENT.
763
00:50:57,838 --> 00:50:59,296
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
764
00:50:59,421 --> 00:51:01,797
AS YOU KNOW, WE HAVE
SOMETHING SPECIAL
765
00:51:01,922 --> 00:51:04,171
DOWN HERE AT BIRDLAND
THIS EVENING--
766
00:51:04,338 --> 00:51:07,838
A RECORDING
FOR BLUE NOTE RECORDS.
767
00:51:07,964 --> 00:51:10,838
LET'S GET TOGETHER AND BRING
ART BLAKEY TO THE BANDSTAND
768
00:51:10,964 --> 00:51:12,880
WITH A GREAT BIG ROUND
OF APPLAUSE.
769
00:51:13,004 --> 00:51:15,755
HOW ABOUT A BIG HAND THERE
FOR ART BLAKEY!
770
00:51:15,880 --> 00:51:18,922
THANK YOU!
771
00:51:26,338 --> 00:51:28,296
YOU COULD
FEEL THE RHYTHM
772
00:51:28,421 --> 00:51:29,713
ANYWHERE YOU STOOD
ON ART BLAKEY'S BANDSTAND,
773
00:51:29,838 --> 00:51:31,672
BECAUSE ART WAS SO STRONG,
774
00:51:31,797 --> 00:51:35,672
AND HIS STYLE WAS ABOUT ENERGY
AND THUNDER, YOU KNOW.
775
00:51:35,797 --> 00:51:41,004
AN ART BLAKEY THUNDER.
776
00:51:41,129 --> 00:51:43,505
ART BLAKEY,
LIKE ALL THE JAZZ MUSICIANS,
777
00:51:43,672 --> 00:51:48,755
IS THAT COMBINATION
OF SOUL, INTELLIGENCE, AND SPIRITUALITY.
778
00:51:48,880 --> 00:51:51,088
HE COULD JUST DO THINGS
NOBODY ELSE COULD DO
779
00:51:51,213 --> 00:51:52,713
AND COULD GET BY WITH IT.
780
00:51:52,838 --> 00:51:55,171
AND YOU TALK ABOUT, LIKE,
DISSIPATION, GETTING HIGH,
781
00:51:55,296 --> 00:51:57,421
LYING, HANGING OUT LATE,
ANY OF THAT,
782
00:51:57,547 --> 00:52:16,547
BUT YOU STILL HAD TO LOVE HIM.
783
00:52:16,672 --> 00:52:20,046
THE DRUMMER ART BLAKEY
MADE IT HIS LIFE'S WORK
784
00:52:20,171 --> 00:52:32,171
TO BRING BACK TO JAZZ
THE AUDIENCE IT HAD LOST TO RHYTHM AND BLUES.
785
00:52:32,296 --> 00:52:36,004
HE HAD LAUNCHED
HIS OWN BIG BAND AT 15
786
00:52:36,171 --> 00:52:38,046
AND DEVELOPED
HIS THUNDEROUS STYLE
787
00:52:38,171 --> 00:52:47,088
WHILE PLAYING WITH
FLETCHER HENDERSON AND BILLY ECKSTINE.
788
00:52:47,213 --> 00:52:51,046
HE TWICE VISITED WEST AFRICA,
FASCINATED BY ITS RHYTHMS,
789
00:52:51,171 --> 00:52:52,880
AND HE ADOPTED ISLAM
790
00:52:53,004 --> 00:53:01,046
AND SOMETIMES CALLED HIMSELF
ABDULLAH IBN BUHAINA.
791
00:53:01,171 --> 00:53:03,171
BUT JAZZ, HE ONCE SAID,
792
00:53:03,338 --> 00:53:06,713
"DOESN'T HAVE A DAMN THING
TO DO WITH AFRICA."
793
00:53:06,838 --> 00:53:09,588
IT WAS AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN
CREATION, HE INSISTED.
794
00:53:09,713 --> 00:53:36,338
"IT COULDN'T HAVE COME
FROM ANYONE BUT US."
795
00:53:50,838 --> 00:53:52,672
IN 1955,
796
00:53:52,838 --> 00:53:57,255
BLAKEY AND A YOUNG PIANIST
AND COMPOSER NAMED HORACE SILVER
797
00:53:57,380 --> 00:54:13,046
ESTABLISHED A QUINTET
THEY CALLED THE JAZZ MESSENGERS.
798
00:54:13,171 --> 00:54:15,630
THEY BROUGHT IN
GOSPEL INFLUENCES,
799
00:54:15,755 --> 00:54:18,505
BLUES INFLUENCES, THINGS
THAT PEOPLE COULD RELATE TO
800
00:54:18,672 --> 00:54:21,505
WHO WERE NOT DEEPLY
INTO MODERN JAZZ,
801
00:54:21,630 --> 00:54:39,296
AND IT CAUGHT ON VERY QUICKLY.
802
00:54:39,421 --> 00:54:41,296
THE MESSAGE OF THE GROUP WAS
803
00:54:41,421 --> 00:54:43,964
"WE SWING, WE'RE EARTHY,
WE PLAY THE BLUES.
804
00:54:44,088 --> 00:54:47,296
"YOU CAN WALK AWAY HUMMING IT,
BUT WE'RE NOT GOING TO CHEAT
805
00:54:47,421 --> 00:54:49,880
ON THE QUALITY OF THE MUSIC
OR THE CREATIVITY."
806
00:54:50,004 --> 00:54:53,838
AND THEY FOUND A WAY
TO DO EVERYTHING.
807
00:54:54,004 --> 00:54:56,380
THE RECORDS
THEY MADE FOR BLUE NOTE
808
00:54:56,505 --> 00:54:59,588
INCORPORATED THE SOUNDS
OF GOSPEL AND RHYTHM AND BLUES
809
00:54:59,713 --> 00:55:03,088
AND WERE MEANT TO PROVIDE
A SWINGING, EARTHY ALTERNATIVE
810
00:55:03,213 --> 00:55:07,255
TO THE COOL, POPULAR SOUNDS
OF WEST COAST JAZZ.
811
00:55:07,380 --> 00:55:16,797
CRITICS LABELED THE MUSIC BLAKEY
HAD BEGUN TO PLAY "HARD BOP."
812
00:55:16,922 --> 00:55:18,421
TUNES BY THE MESSENGERS,
813
00:55:18,547 --> 00:55:21,171
THE SOULFUL ELECTRIC ORGAN
PLAYER JIMMY SMITH,
814
00:55:21,296 --> 00:55:24,421
AND A HOST OF OTHERS
STARTED TURNING UP ON JUKEBOXES
815
00:55:24,547 --> 00:55:27,672
IN BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS
ACROSS THE COUNTRY--
816
00:55:27,838 --> 00:55:30,672
CHICAGO'S SOUTH SIDE,
817
00:55:30,797 --> 00:55:33,588
CENTRAL AVENUE IN LOS ANGELES,
818
00:55:33,713 --> 00:55:39,672
125th STREET IN HARLEM.
819
00:55:39,838 --> 00:55:43,380
EVEN THEIR TITLES
CELEBRATED THE CULTURE FROM WHICH THEY CAME--
820
00:55:43,505 --> 00:55:45,713
HOME COOKIN',
821
00:55:45,838 --> 00:55:47,338
CORNBREAD,
822
00:55:47,505 --> 00:55:50,338
GRITS 'N GRAVY,
823
00:55:50,505 --> 00:55:53,380
THE PREACHER,
824
00:55:53,505 --> 00:55:59,505
BACK AT THE CHICKEN SHACK.
825
00:55:59,672 --> 00:56:04,004
WHAT YOU GOT WAS BLACK
MUSICIANS WHO WERE SAYING,
826
00:56:04,171 --> 00:56:07,505
"WE'RE GOING TO INVENT
A MUSICAL STYLE AND FORM
827
00:56:07,672 --> 00:56:09,922
"THAT WHITE PEOPLE CAN'T COPY.
828
00:56:10,046 --> 00:56:12,547
"IT'S GOING TO BE TECHNICALLY
SOMETHING THAT THEY CAN'T COPY.
829
00:56:12,672 --> 00:56:14,380
"IT'S GOING TO HAVE
A CERTAIN KIND OF SWING
830
00:56:14,505 --> 00:56:16,088
"OR CERTAIN KIND OF RHYTHM
THAT THEY CAN'T COPY,
831
00:56:16,213 --> 00:56:17,421
"CERTAIN KIND OF WAY OF PLAYING.
832
00:56:17,547 --> 00:56:20,588
"BUT ALSO BECAUSE IT'S
GOING TO BE SO ETHNICIZED
833
00:56:20,713 --> 00:56:23,171
"THAT THEY REALLY
CAN'T COPY IT
834
00:56:23,338 --> 00:56:26,964
"WITHOUT ABSOLUTELY LOOKING
LIKE A MINSTREL SHOW.
835
00:56:27,088 --> 00:56:31,505
I MEAN,
SO THEY CAN'T DO IT."
836
00:56:31,630 --> 00:56:35,880
ART BLAKEY'S MUSIC
WAS ALWAYS FILLED WITH JOY.
837
00:56:36,004 --> 00:56:37,964
"WHEN WE'RE ON THE STAND,"
HE SAID,
838
00:56:38,088 --> 00:56:40,338
"AND WE SEE THAT THERE ARE
PEOPLE IN THE AUDIENCE
839
00:56:40,463 --> 00:56:41,838
"WHO AREN'T PATTING THEIR FEET
840
00:56:41,964 --> 00:56:44,338
"AND WHO AREN'T NODDING
THEIR HEADS TO OUR MUSIC,
841
00:56:44,463 --> 00:56:46,463
"WE KNOW WE'RE DOING
SOMETHING WRONG.
842
00:56:46,588 --> 00:56:48,838
"BECAUSE WHEN WE DO GET
OUR MESSAGE ACROSS,
843
00:56:48,964 --> 00:56:57,588
THOSE HEADS AND FEET DO MOVE."
844
00:56:57,713 --> 00:57:02,004
HORACE SILVER EVENTUALLY WENT ON
TO FORM GROUPS OF HIS OWN,
845
00:57:02,171 --> 00:57:06,338
BUT ART BLAKEY KEPT THE NAME
THE JAZZ MESSENGERS,
846
00:57:06,463 --> 00:57:10,338
AND FOR 45 YEARS,
TRAVELED THE WORLD SPREADING HIS MESSAGE
847
00:57:10,463 --> 00:57:16,338
TO ANYONE WILLING TO LISTEN.
848
00:57:16,505 --> 00:57:18,505
WE USED TO CALL HIM
849
00:57:18,630 --> 00:57:21,255
THE GREATEST
JAZZ UNIVERSITY AROUND.
850
00:57:21,380 --> 00:57:24,171
HE USED TO ASK PLAYERS
851
00:57:24,296 --> 00:57:27,171
THAT ANOTHER LEADER MIGHT FIND
VALUABLE, INDISPENSABLE,
852
00:57:27,296 --> 00:57:29,213
AND WANT TO HOLD ON TO,
853
00:57:29,338 --> 00:57:31,713
HE USED TO TELL MUSICIANS,
"WELL, YOU'RE READY NOW.
854
00:57:31,838 --> 00:57:33,588
"YOU'VE GOT THE TUNES.
YOU'VE GOT THE EXPERIENCE.
855
00:57:33,713 --> 00:57:35,588
"IT'S TIME FOR YOU
TO LEAD A BAND,
856
00:57:35,713 --> 00:57:39,838
GET 5 YOUNG CATS
AND FEED THE TRIBUTARY OF JAZZ THAT WAY."
857
00:57:40,004 --> 00:57:42,713
WELL, HE'S THE GREATEST
BANDLEADER THAT I EVER WORKED WITH.
858
00:57:42,838 --> 00:57:44,672
I NOT ONLY LEARNED SO MUCH
859
00:57:44,797 --> 00:57:47,171
ABOUT HOW TO LEAD A BAND
FROM ART,
860
00:57:47,296 --> 00:57:53,213
BUT I ALSO LEARNED HOW TO
GROW UP AND BE A MAN FROM ART.
861
00:57:53,338 --> 00:57:56,171
GENERATION
AFTER GENERATION OF FUTURE STARS
862
00:57:56,296 --> 00:58:03,046
WOULD GET THEIR START OR HONE
THEIR SKILLS WITH BLAKEY.
863
00:58:03,171 --> 00:58:05,797
JACKIE McLEAN,
864
00:58:05,922 --> 00:58:08,547
HANK MOBLEY,
865
00:58:08,672 --> 00:58:11,046
DONALD BYRD,
866
00:58:11,171 --> 00:58:13,838
BOBBY TIMMONS,
867
00:58:13,964 --> 00:58:16,171
BENNY GOLSON,
868
00:58:16,338 --> 00:58:18,880
WOODY SHAW,
869
00:58:19,004 --> 00:58:21,088
LEE MORGAN,
870
00:58:21,213 --> 00:58:23,338
FREDDIE HUBBARD,
871
00:58:23,463 --> 00:58:25,630
KEITH JARRETT,
872
00:58:25,755 --> 00:58:28,296
JOANNE BRACKEEN,
873
00:58:28,421 --> 00:58:30,547
WAYNE SHORTER,
874
00:58:30,672 --> 00:58:35,338
WYNTON MARSALIS.
875
00:58:35,505 --> 00:58:37,338
YEAH, THE MESSENGERS
WERE THE TRAINING GROUND
876
00:58:37,505 --> 00:58:38,838
FOR A LOT OF GREAT MUSICIANS
877
00:58:39,004 --> 00:58:40,838
BECAUSE HE GAVE YOU
A CHANCE TO PLAY
878
00:58:41,004 --> 00:58:42,338
AND TO LEARN HOW TO PLAY.
879
00:58:42,505 --> 00:58:44,505
HE WOULD PUT HIS SWING
UP UNDERNEATH YOU
880
00:58:44,630 --> 00:58:45,838
SO THAT YOU COULD LEARN
HOW TO PLAY,
881
00:58:46,004 --> 00:58:47,463
AND HE WOULD TELL YOU
YOU WERE SAD.
882
00:58:47,588 --> 00:58:50,505
AND WHEN I FIRST SAT IN
WITH HIM, I KNEW I WASN'T PLAYING NOTHING.
883
00:58:50,630 --> 00:58:52,338
HE SAID, "MAN, YOU SAD,
BUT THAT'S ALL RIGHT."
884
00:58:52,505 --> 00:58:54,004
AND WHEN YOU WERE AROUND HIM,
885
00:58:54,129 --> 00:58:56,296
YOU WERE AROUND
THE ESSENCE OF JAZZ MUSIC.
886
00:58:56,421 --> 00:58:58,797
SO HE PUT THAT IN US.
887
00:58:58,922 --> 00:59:00,797
IF YOU WANT TO PLAY THIS MUSIC,
888
00:59:00,922 --> 00:59:03,296
YOU HAVE TO PLAY IT WITH SOUL,
WITH INTENSITY,
889
00:59:03,421 --> 00:59:07,255
AND EVERY TIME
YOU TOUCH YOUR HORN, YOU PLAY YOUR HORN.
890
00:59:07,380 --> 00:59:11,838
THIS IS NOT A GAME.
891
00:59:11,964 --> 00:59:14,171
EVERYBODY
HAD TO DO THEIR JOB,
892
00:59:14,338 --> 00:59:18,505
OR YOU WERE REPLACED.
893
00:59:18,630 --> 00:59:21,171
AND IN EVERY CITY
THAT WE WENT TO,
894
00:59:21,296 --> 00:59:23,964
IF THERE WAS A STAR
ALTO PLAYER THERE,
895
00:59:24,088 --> 00:59:27,255
HE WOULD INVITE HIM TO COME
AND PLAY WITH THE BAND.
896
00:59:27,380 --> 00:59:30,338
AND THAT WAS ALWAYS
TO KEEP ME ON NOTICE
897
00:59:30,463 --> 00:59:33,547
THAT THERE WAS ALWAYS SOMEBODY
WAITING IN THE WINGS.
898
00:59:55,129 --> 00:59:58,838
ON THE ROAD,
BLAKEY WAS INDEFATIGABLE,
899
00:59:58,964 --> 01:00:00,964
PLAYING GIG AFTER GIG
900
01:00:01,088 --> 01:00:05,505
AND OUTPLAYING MUSICIANS
HALF HIS AGE.
901
01:00:05,630 --> 01:00:10,380
AND HE WAS UTTERLY FEARLESS.
902
01:00:10,505 --> 01:00:13,338
THE DRUMMER ART TAYLOR TOLD ME ONE TIME
903
01:00:13,505 --> 01:00:16,129
THAT SOME SOME GANGSTERS
IN BROOKLYN TOOK HIS DRUMS
904
01:00:16,255 --> 01:00:18,046
BECAUSE HE OWED THEM
SOME MONEY.
905
01:00:18,171 --> 01:00:19,630
HE SAYS--
SO ART BLAKEY SAYS--
906
01:00:19,755 --> 01:00:22,380
AFTER A GIG, IT WAS, LIKE,
3:30 IN THE MORNING,
907
01:00:22,505 --> 01:00:24,547
ART BLAKEY SAID,
"LET'S GO TO THEIR HOUSE."
908
01:00:24,672 --> 01:00:26,004
THEY KNEW
WHO THESE PEOPLE WERE.
909
01:00:26,129 --> 01:00:28,630
"LET'S GO TO THEIR HOUSE
AND GET YOUR DRUMS."
910
01:00:28,755 --> 01:00:31,838
SO THEY WENT UP THERE.
3:30, 4:00 IN THE MORNING,
911
01:00:31,964 --> 01:00:33,964
ART BLAKEY
KNOCKS ON THE DOOR,
912
01:00:34,088 --> 01:00:37,213
AND A GUY ANSWERS THE DOOR
WITH HIS GUN IN HAND.
913
01:00:37,338 --> 01:00:40,713
AND ART BLAKEY GOES,
"THIS MAN IS A MUSICIAN,
914
01:00:40,838 --> 01:00:43,213
"AND YOU'VE
TAKEN HIS DRUMS.
915
01:00:43,338 --> 01:00:46,004
"NOW, UH,
HE OWES YOU SOME MONEY,
916
01:00:46,129 --> 01:00:49,838
"BUT THERE'S NO WAY
FOR HIM TO MAKE THE MONEY
917
01:00:49,964 --> 01:00:52,171
"IF YOU DEPRIVE HIM
OF A MEANS
918
01:00:52,296 --> 01:00:55,505
"OF MAKING A LIVING.
HE'S A MUSICIAN.
919
01:00:55,630 --> 01:00:57,004
HE'S NOT A CRIMINAL."
920
01:00:57,129 --> 01:01:00,046
SO WHEN ART BLAKEY
GOT FINISHED TALKING,
921
01:01:00,171 --> 01:01:04,004
THE GUYS WENT AND GOT HIS DRUMS
AND GAVE THEM TO HIM.
922
01:01:04,129 --> 01:01:06,004
AND THAT'S HOW HE WAS.
923
01:01:06,129 --> 01:01:08,046
HE COULD JUST DO THINGS
THAT OTHER PEOPLE COULD NOT DO
924
01:01:08,171 --> 01:01:09,547
BECAUSE HE BELIEVED
IN IT SO MUCH.
925
01:01:09,672 --> 01:01:11,713
YOU KNOW, AND WHEN
HE TOLD ME THE STORY,
926
01:01:11,838 --> 01:01:13,630
I COULD SEE
ART BLAKEY DOING THAT
927
01:01:13,755 --> 01:01:16,046
BECAUSE HE COULD JUST
TALK TO YOU A CERTAIN WAY,
928
01:01:16,171 --> 01:01:18,004
AND IT WOULD
MAKE YOU BELIEVE
929
01:01:18,129 --> 01:01:19,713
THAT YOU COULD
DO SOMETHING.
930
01:01:19,838 --> 01:01:25,004
HE HAD THAT BELIEF IN HIM.
931
01:01:25,129 --> 01:01:27,213
"FIRE--
THAT'S WHAT PEOPLE WANT,"
932
01:01:27,338 --> 01:01:31,338
HE TOLD HIS YOUNG MUSICIANS
AGAIN AND AGAIN.
933
01:01:31,505 --> 01:01:33,672
"JAZZ," ART BLAKEY SAID,
934
01:01:33,838 --> 01:01:49,838
"WASHES AWAY THE DUST
OF EVERYDAY LIFE."
935
01:02:01,964 --> 01:02:05,505
ON DECEMBER 6, 1957,
936
01:02:05,630 --> 01:02:08,505
2 JAZZ WRITERS--WHITNEY BALLIETT
AND NAT HENTOFF--
937
01:02:08,630 --> 01:02:10,046
HELPED GATHER
938
01:02:10,171 --> 01:02:12,171
AN EXTRAORDINARY GROUP
OF MUSICIANS
939
01:02:12,296 --> 01:02:15,588
FOR A ONE-TIME-ONLY
LIVE PROGRAM ON CBS
940
01:02:15,713 --> 01:02:20,672
CALLED THE SOUND OF JAZZ.
941
01:02:20,838 --> 01:02:26,547
NOTHING LIKE IT HAD
EVER BEEN TRIED BEFORE ON AMERICAN TELEVISION.
942
01:02:26,672 --> 01:02:29,672
IT WAS AN ALL-STAR
ASSEMBLAGE--
943
01:02:29,838 --> 01:02:31,797
JO JONES AND COUNT BASIE,
944
01:02:31,922 --> 01:02:34,004
THELONIOUS MONK
AND COLEMAN HAWKINS,
945
01:02:34,171 --> 01:02:36,213
GERRY MULLIGAN
AND BEN WEBSTER,
946
01:02:36,338 --> 01:02:37,630
LESTER YOUNG...
947
01:02:37,755 --> 01:02:41,129
AND BILLIE HOLIDAY.
948
01:02:41,255 --> 01:02:45,547
LESTER
AND BILLIE HAD BEEN VERY CLOSE FOR YEARS.
949
01:02:45,672 --> 01:02:48,964
BUT FOR SOME REASON--
AND NOBODY COULD TELL ME WHY--
950
01:02:49,088 --> 01:02:51,505
THEY HAD GONE WAY APART
IN PRECEDING YEARS,
951
01:02:51,630 --> 01:02:53,171
AND WHEN WE WERE THERE
952
01:02:53,296 --> 01:02:55,463
FOR THE BLOCKING
AND THE SOUND CHECK,
953
01:02:55,588 --> 01:02:57,505
THEY VERY CAREFULLY
WERE ON DIFFERENT SIDES
954
01:02:57,630 --> 01:02:59,004
OF THE STUDIO.
955
01:02:59,129 --> 01:03:00,588
LESTER WAS NOT WELL.
956
01:03:00,713 --> 01:03:04,338
HE WAS SUPPOSED TO BE
IN THE BIG BAND SECTION, IN ANOTHER SECTION,
957
01:03:04,463 --> 01:03:08,171
AND I SAID, "LOOK,
WHY DON'T YOU JUST DO THE THING WITH BILLIE?
958
01:03:08,296 --> 01:03:11,004
AND YOU CAN SIT DOWN,
YOU DON'T HAVE TO STAND."
959
01:03:11,129 --> 01:03:14,505
AND THE THING WITH BILLIE
WAS A SMALL GROUP-- ROY ELDRIDGE, LESTER--
960
01:03:14,630 --> 01:03:17,338
AND BILLIE WAS SINGING
ONE OF THE VERY FEW BLUES
961
01:03:17,463 --> 01:03:18,630
SHE EVER DID--
962
01:03:18,755 --> 01:03:20,838
FINE AND MELLOW,
WHICH SHE WROTE.
963
01:03:26,505 --> 01:03:30,171
♪♪ MY MAN DON'T LOVE ME ♪♪
964
01:03:30,296 --> 01:03:37,213
♪♪ HE TREATS ME,
OH, SO MEAN ♪♪
965
01:03:37,338 --> 01:03:39,380
♪♪ MY MAN ♪♪
966
01:03:39,505 --> 01:03:42,630
♪♪ HE DON'T LOVE ME ♪♪
967
01:03:42,755 --> 01:03:50,171
♪♪ HE TREATS ME
AWFUL MEAN ♪♪
968
01:03:50,296 --> 01:03:55,171
♪♪ HE'S THE LOWEST MAN ♪♪
969
01:03:55,296 --> 01:04:10,338
♪♪ THAT I'VE EVER SEEN ♪♪
970
01:04:10,463 --> 01:04:13,320
BEN WEBSTER
PLAYED THE FIRST SOLO.
971
01:04:36,338 --> 01:04:38,046
LESTER GOT UP,
972
01:04:38,171 --> 01:04:42,274
AND HE PLAYED THE PUREST BLUES
I HAVE EVER HEARD.
973
01:05:05,156 --> 01:05:07,838
AND THEIR EYES WERE
SORT OF INTERLOCKED,
974
01:05:07,964 --> 01:05:11,588
AND SHE WAS SORT OF
NODDING AND HALF-SMILING.
975
01:05:11,713 --> 01:05:14,964
IT WAS AS IF THEY WERE
BOTH REMEMBERING
976
01:05:15,088 --> 01:05:18,713
WHAT HAD BEEN,
WHATEVER THAT WAS.
977
01:05:18,838 --> 01:05:22,088
♪♪ TREAT ME RIGHT, BABY ♪♪
978
01:05:22,213 --> 01:05:26,004
♪♪ AND I'LL STAY HOME
EVERY DAY ♪♪
979
01:05:26,129 --> 01:05:28,255
AND IN THE CONTROL ROOM,
980
01:05:28,380 --> 01:05:30,463
WE WERE
ALL CRYING.
981
01:05:30,588 --> 01:05:35,171
♪♪ JUST
TREAT ME RIGHT, BABY ♪♪
982
01:05:35,338 --> 01:05:43,380
♪♪ AND I'LL STAY HOME
NIGHT AND DAY ♪♪
983
01:05:43,505 --> 01:05:48,380
♪♪ BUT YOU'RE SO MEAN
TO ME, BABY ♪♪
984
01:05:48,505 --> 01:05:56,838
♪♪ I KNOW YOU'RE GONNA
DRIVE ME AWAY ♪♪
985
01:05:56,964 --> 01:06:01,838
♪♪ LOVE IS JUST
LIKE A FAUCET ♪♪
986
01:06:01,964 --> 01:06:09,713
♪♪ IT TURNS OFF AND ON ♪♪
987
01:06:09,838 --> 01:06:14,171
♪♪ LOVE IS LIKE A FAUCET ♪♪
988
01:06:14,338 --> 01:06:21,838
♪♪ IT TURNS OFF AND ON ♪♪
989
01:06:21,964 --> 01:06:26,713
♪♪ SOMETIMES WHEN YOU
THINK IT'S ON, BABY ♪♪
990
01:06:26,838 --> 01:06:38,672
♪♪ IT HAS TURNED OFF
AND GONE ♪♪
991
01:06:38,838 --> 01:06:43,505
WHEN THE SHOW
WAS OVER, THEY WENT THEIR SEPARATE WAYS.
992
01:06:50,129 --> 01:06:52,171
LESTER YOUNG
WAS NOW LIVING
993
01:06:52,296 --> 01:07:02,505
IN THE ALVIN HOTEL
ON 52nd STREET.
994
01:07:02,630 --> 01:07:04,838
HE HAD MOVED THERE
FROM LONG ISLAND,
995
01:07:04,964 --> 01:07:07,547
TELLING HIS WIFE
THAT HE COULD NOT BEAR
996
01:07:07,672 --> 01:07:10,547
TO BE SO FAR
FROM THE WORLD OF JAZZ
997
01:07:10,672 --> 01:07:16,547
THAT HAD ALWAYS BEEN
HIS REAL HOME.
998
01:07:16,672 --> 01:07:23,463
ALCOHOL HAD
DESTROYED HIS HEALTH.
999
01:07:23,588 --> 01:07:26,004
AND I'D COME IN
AND CALL PREZ'S ROOM,
1000
01:07:26,129 --> 01:07:30,463
SEE IF HE WANTED ME
TO GO TO THE STORE OR ANYTHING FOR HIM.
1001
01:07:30,588 --> 01:07:33,171
EVEN WHEN I WAS 19,
20 YEARS OLD, YOU KNOW,
1002
01:07:33,296 --> 01:07:35,338
I LOVED LESTER YOUNG
SO MUCH, YOU KNOW,
1003
01:07:35,463 --> 01:07:37,296
I WOULD SPEND
ANY MOMENT I COULD.
1004
01:07:37,421 --> 01:07:39,338
SOMETIMES HE WOULD SAY,
"YEAH, COME ON UP,"
1005
01:07:39,463 --> 01:07:41,171
AND I'D GO UP
TO HIS ROOM
1006
01:07:41,296 --> 01:07:44,838
AND GO BUY HIM SOME CIGARETTES
OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT.
1007
01:07:45,004 --> 01:07:52,338
IT WAS KIND OF SAD.
1008
01:07:52,505 --> 01:07:54,672
HE USED TO SIT
AT THE WINDOW
1009
01:07:54,797 --> 01:08:03,338
AND LOOK ACROSS AT BIRDLAND
AT THE PEOPLE COMING AND GOING.
1010
01:08:03,463 --> 01:08:06,338
HE STILL PLAYED
FROM TIME TO TIME
1011
01:08:06,505 --> 01:08:10,338
BUT SPENT HIS LAST DAYS
MOVING FROM MOVIE HOUSE TO MOVIE HOUSE
1012
01:08:10,463 --> 01:08:11,880
ON 42ND STREET
1013
01:08:12,004 --> 01:08:14,004
OR LISTENING
TO HIS RECORD PLAYER--
1014
01:08:14,129 --> 01:08:18,338
OTHER PEOPLE'S MUSIC--
FRANK SINATRA, BILLIE HOLIDAY--
1015
01:08:18,463 --> 01:08:25,046
NEVER HIS OWN.
1016
01:08:25,171 --> 01:08:28,338
LESTER YOUNG DIED IN HIS ROOM
AT THE ALVIN HOTEL
1017
01:08:28,463 --> 01:08:33,505
ON MARCH 15, 1959.
1018
01:08:33,672 --> 01:08:38,672
HIS INFLUENCE
WAS EVERYWHERE.
1019
01:08:38,797 --> 01:08:42,838
"ANYONE WHO DOESN'T PLAY
LIKE LESTER," ONE MUSICIAN SAID,
1020
01:08:42,964 --> 01:08:55,672
"IS WRONG."
1021
01:09:10,171 --> 01:09:13,129
♪♪ THEM THAT'S GOT
SHALL HAVE ♪♪
1022
01:09:13,255 --> 01:09:17,046
♪♪ THEM THAT'S NOT
SHALL LOSE ♪♪
1023
01:09:17,171 --> 01:09:19,880
♪♪ SO THE BIBLE SAID ♪♪
1024
01:09:20,004 --> 01:09:24,338
♪♪AND IT STILL IS NEWS ♪♪
1025
01:09:24,463 --> 01:09:27,880
♪♪ MAMA MAY HAVE ♪♪
1026
01:09:28,004 --> 01:09:30,672
♪♪ PAPA MAY HAVE ♪♪
1027
01:09:30,797 --> 01:09:37,004
♪♪ BUT GOD BLESS THE CHILD
THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1028
01:09:37,129 --> 01:09:41,171
♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1029
01:09:41,338 --> 01:09:44,505
I KNEW
SHE WAS BAD OFF.
1030
01:09:44,672 --> 01:09:52,505
BEN WEBSTER USED TO SAY,
"OH, ME, THAT POOR GIRL."
1031
01:09:52,672 --> 01:09:55,797
WE DID HER LAST RECORD DATE
FOR NORMAN GRANZ
1032
01:09:55,922 --> 01:09:57,630
OUT HERE AT CAPITOL RECORDS.
1033
01:09:57,755 --> 01:10:02,046
AND SHE WAS
VERY WASTED.
1034
01:10:02,171 --> 01:10:05,171
AND I HAVE A PICTURE
THAT WAS TAKEN
1035
01:10:05,296 --> 01:10:09,005
OF RED MITCHELL AND ME
AT THE PIANO AND HER,
1036
01:10:09,129 --> 01:10:12,797
AND SHE LOOKS VERY,
VERY WEAK AND FRAIL.
1037
01:10:12,922 --> 01:10:17,046
DOESN'T LOOK LIKE THE LADY DAY
THAT I FIRST MET...
1038
01:10:17,171 --> 01:10:20,588
BECAUSE SHE HAD BEEN
INTO SOME AWFUL DEEP STUFF.
1039
01:10:20,713 --> 01:10:23,213
♪♪ MONEY ♪♪
1040
01:10:23,338 --> 01:10:27,338
♪♪ YOU'VE GOT LOTS
OF FRIENDS ♪♪
1041
01:10:27,463 --> 01:10:30,171
BY THE TIME
LESTER YOUNG DIED,
1042
01:10:30,296 --> 01:10:32,463
HIS OLD FRIEND
BILLIE HOLIDAY
1043
01:10:32,588 --> 01:10:35,088
WAS ALMOST
UNRECOGNIZABLE.
1044
01:10:35,213 --> 01:10:38,672
♪♪ BUT WHEN YOU'RE GONE ♪♪
1045
01:10:38,838 --> 01:10:42,338
SOME EVENINGS
SHE COULD NOT REMEMBER THE LYRICS OF SONGS
1046
01:10:42,463 --> 01:10:44,838
SHE HAD BEEN SINGING
NEARLY EVERY NIGHT
1047
01:10:44,964 --> 01:10:47,338
FOR MORE
THAN TWO DECADES.
1048
01:10:47,463 --> 01:10:49,505
♪♪ RICH RELATIONS GIVE ♪♪
1049
01:10:49,630 --> 01:10:51,380
IN MAY OF 1959,
1050
01:10:51,505 --> 01:10:53,880
2 MONTHS AFTER
LESTER YOUNG'S DEATH,
1051
01:10:54,005 --> 01:10:58,672
SHE COLLAPSED AND WAS RUSHED
TO THE HOSPITAL.
1052
01:10:58,797 --> 01:11:04,797
SOMEHOW, SOMEONE MANAGED
TO SMUGGLE HEROIN INTO HER ROOM.
1053
01:11:04,922 --> 01:11:07,171
A NURSE DISCOVERED IT.
1054
01:11:07,338 --> 01:11:09,797
HOLIDAY WAS PLACED
UNDER ARREST.
1055
01:11:09,922 --> 01:11:13,797
POLICE WERE STATIONED
AT THE DOOR OF HER ROOM.
1056
01:11:13,922 --> 01:11:16,505
♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1057
01:11:16,672 --> 01:11:20,046
♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1058
01:11:20,171 --> 01:11:24,338
BILLIE HOLIDAY,
PERHAPS THE GREATEST OF ALL JAZZ SINGERS,
1059
01:11:24,463 --> 01:11:29,133
DIED AT 3:10 A.M.,
JULY 17, 1959.
1060
01:11:33,463 --> 01:11:38,171
SHE WAS 44 YEARS OLD.
1061
01:11:38,296 --> 01:11:41,505
♪♪ RICH RELATIONS GIVE ♪♪
1062
01:11:41,630 --> 01:11:47,046
THE OFFICIAL CAUSE
WAS CARDIAC FAILURE.
1063
01:11:47,171 --> 01:11:50,505
THE REAL CAUSE,
SAID HER MANAGER JOE GLASER,
1064
01:11:50,672 --> 01:11:55,505
WAS "A CONCOCTION OF
EVERYTHING SHE HAD DONE IN THE LAST 20 YEARS."
1065
01:11:55,672 --> 01:11:57,171
♪♪ MAMA MAY HAVE ♪♪
1066
01:11:57,296 --> 01:11:58,588
♪♪ PAPA MAY HAVE ♪♪
1067
01:11:58,713 --> 01:12:02,338
I GOT THE WORD
FROM NEW YORK THAT SHE DIED.
1068
01:12:02,463 --> 01:12:05,922
AND IT WAS--
IT WAS JUST A TRAGEDY,
1069
01:12:06,046 --> 01:12:13,547
BUT I SURE HOPE
THAT SHE'S RESTING COMFORTABLY.
1070
01:12:13,672 --> 01:12:16,463
I CAN'T THINK
OF BILLIE HOLIDAY
1071
01:12:16,588 --> 01:12:20,838
WITHOUT TEARS COMING
TO MY EYE.
1072
01:12:20,964 --> 01:12:25,338
THERE WAS ALWAYS
SOMETHING OF PAIN,
1073
01:12:25,463 --> 01:12:27,838
ALWAYS SOMETHING...
1074
01:12:27,964 --> 01:12:33,588
THAT WAS HEARTBREAKING
IN HER RENDITION.
1075
01:12:33,713 --> 01:12:36,255
AND SHE WASN'T
ONLY TALKING
1076
01:12:36,380 --> 01:12:38,588
ABOUT HER OWN HEARTBREAK.
1077
01:12:38,713 --> 01:12:41,713
SHE WAS TALKING
ABOUT YOURS, TOO.
1078
01:12:41,838 --> 01:12:44,672
UH, THE THING
THAT JOINED US,
1079
01:12:44,797 --> 01:12:47,713
YOU KNOW,
WAS THE COMMON CONCEPT
1080
01:12:47,838 --> 01:12:51,255
THAT THE MISERY
SHE WAS SINGING, YOU KNOW,
1081
01:12:51,380 --> 01:12:56,755
WAS ONE THAT INCLUDED US
AND EMBRACED US ALL.
1082
01:12:56,880 --> 01:13:02,672
SHE COULD, LIKE A MOTHER
WITH A BIG, WARM BOSOM,
1083
01:13:02,797 --> 01:13:08,338
REACH OUT AND EMBRACE
AND HOLD CLOSE--
1084
01:13:08,463 --> 01:13:11,505
NOT IN THE GOSPEL SENSE,
1085
01:13:11,630 --> 01:13:15,005
BUT IN THE SENSE,
YOU KNOW,
1086
01:13:15,129 --> 01:13:19,380
"GOD BLESS THE CHILD
THAT'S GOT HIS OWN."
1087
01:13:19,505 --> 01:13:27,171
♪♪ HE JUST DON'T WORRY
'BOUT NOTHIN' ♪♪
1088
01:13:27,296 --> 01:13:33,547
♪♪ 'CAUSE HE'S
GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1089
01:13:33,672 --> 01:13:45,338
♪♪ YES, HE'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪
1090
01:13:56,797 --> 01:13:58,797
IN 1956,
1091
01:13:58,922 --> 01:14:04,838
MILES DAVIS
FOUND STILL ANOTHER WAY TO EXPRESS HIS GENIUS...
1092
01:14:04,964 --> 01:14:07,547
AND HE DID IT
WITH HIS OLD FRIEND,
1093
01:14:07,672 --> 01:14:22,171
THE ARRANGER GIL EVANS.
1094
01:14:22,296 --> 01:14:24,838
AND WHEN MILES
REALLY BECAME IMPORTANT
1095
01:14:25,005 --> 01:14:28,129
AND WAS SIGNED
WITH COLUMBIA RECORDS IN 1956,
1096
01:14:28,255 --> 01:14:32,171
ONE OF THE FIRST THINGS HE DID
WAS TO SIGN UP GIL EVANS
1097
01:14:32,296 --> 01:14:35,296
TO WRITE AN ALBUM THAT
BECAME KNOWN AS MILES AHEAD.
1098
01:14:35,421 --> 01:14:39,171
AND THIS WAS THE FIRST
OF THE 3 MAJOR WORKS THEY DID TOGETHER,
1099
01:14:39,338 --> 01:14:41,838
AND THEY ARE AMONG THE MOST
EXQUISITELY BEAUTIFUL
1100
01:14:42,005 --> 01:14:46,672
AND SATISFYINGLY REALIZED LPs
OF THAT WHOLE ERA.
1101
01:14:46,838 --> 01:14:49,213
Narrator: MILES AHEAD,
1102
01:14:49,338 --> 01:14:51,380
PORGY AND BESS,
1103
01:14:51,505 --> 01:14:53,338
AND SKETCHES OF SPAIN
1104
01:14:53,505 --> 01:14:55,797
ARE 3 OF THE BEST-LOVED
1105
01:14:55,922 --> 01:14:58,129
JAZZ ALBUMS EVER MADE.
1106
01:14:58,255 --> 01:15:00,838
ALL OF THEM
FEATURED DAVIS
1107
01:15:01,005 --> 01:15:18,838
IN LUSH
ORCHESTRAL SETTINGS.
1108
01:15:23,672 --> 01:15:25,797
GIL ONCE
TOLD ME THAT THE SOUNDS
1109
01:15:25,922 --> 01:15:27,171
THAT MILES MADE
IN THOSE YEARS
1110
01:15:27,296 --> 01:15:28,713
WERE EXTREMELY DIFFICULT
FOR HIM.
1111
01:15:28,838 --> 01:15:30,338
THEY WERE PAINFUL PHYSICALLY
AND EMOTIONALLY.
1112
01:15:30,463 --> 01:15:33,505
I MEAN, IN A WAY, HE WAS
A KIND OF, YOU KNOW,
1113
01:15:33,672 --> 01:15:34,838
MARLON BRANDO
OF THE TRUMPET.
1114
01:15:34,964 --> 01:15:37,505
HE WAS REALLY CHANGING
THE SOUND OF THE INSTRUMENT.
1115
01:15:37,672 --> 01:15:40,672
AND GIL WAS ABLE TO FIND,
YOU KNOW,
1116
01:15:40,838 --> 01:15:43,171
RICH, ORIGINAL
ORCHESTRATIONS
1117
01:15:43,338 --> 01:15:59,171
THAT JUST SEEMED TO WRAP
THEMSELVES AROUND MILES.
1118
01:15:59,296 --> 01:16:02,338
GIL WOULD JUST
CREATE A CHORD,
1119
01:16:02,505 --> 01:16:04,922
AND THEN
HE WOULD THROW, YOU KNOW,
1120
01:16:05,046 --> 01:16:07,338
A COUPLE OF MINUTES
OF OPEN SPACE
1121
01:16:07,505 --> 01:16:25,421
FOR MILES TO FILL IT IN.
1122
01:16:25,547 --> 01:16:28,505
AND THE CHORD WOULD ANTICIPATE
WHAT MILES WOULD PLAY,
1123
01:16:28,630 --> 01:16:30,088
AND THEN
THE FOLLOWING CHORD
1124
01:16:30,213 --> 01:16:35,380
WOULD PICK UP ON WHAT
MILES HAD PLAYED.
1125
01:16:35,505 --> 01:16:41,838
THEY REALLY
THOUGHT TOGETHER AS ONE.
1126
01:16:41,964 --> 01:16:43,755
THOSE ARE THE KINDS
OF RECORDS,
1127
01:16:43,880 --> 01:16:46,505
ESPECIALLY SKETCHES OF SPAIN
AND PORGY AND BESS,
1128
01:16:46,630 --> 01:16:48,880
THAT I REMEMBER A LOT OF WOMEN
WOULD HAVE IN RECORD COLLECTIONS
1129
01:16:49,005 --> 01:16:50,338
THAT WERE OTHERWISE
ROCK AND ROLL
1130
01:16:50,463 --> 01:16:51,838
AND A COUPLE
OF CLASSICAL,
1131
01:16:51,964 --> 01:16:53,505
AND THERE WOULD BE
ONE JAZZ RECORD,
1132
01:16:53,630 --> 01:16:55,421
AND IT WOULD BE THAT BECAUSE IT
WAS SO SOPHISTICATED AND WORLDLY
1133
01:16:55,547 --> 01:16:58,171
AND IT WOULD SET
A MOOD AND IT WAS SEXY AND EROTIC,
1134
01:16:58,296 --> 01:17:00,505
AND IF YOU WANTED
TO IMPRESS SOMEBODY ON THE FIRST DATE,
1135
01:17:00,630 --> 01:17:02,713
THAT WAS ALWAYS THE RECORD
THAT WOULD GO ON THE TURNTABLE.
1136
01:17:11,964 --> 01:17:13,463
MILES DAVIS WAS NOW
1137
01:17:13,588 --> 01:17:17,547
THE HIGHEST PAID MUSICIAN
IN JAZZ, BLACK OR WHITE,
1138
01:17:17,672 --> 01:17:21,046
AND HE HAD BECOME
A DEFIANT SYMBOL OF SUCCESS
1139
01:17:21,171 --> 01:17:25,588
FOR A NEW GENERATION
OF AFRICAN AMERICANS.
1140
01:17:25,713 --> 01:17:32,421
HE WAS FOND OF FINE CLOTHES,
FAST CARS, AND BEAUTIFUL WOMEN,
1141
01:17:32,547 --> 01:17:35,421
"A BLACK MAN,"
A FELLOW MUSICIAN SAID,
1142
01:17:35,547 --> 01:17:41,505
"WHO LIVES LIKE
A WHITE MAN."
1143
01:17:41,630 --> 01:17:46,338
DAVIS CULTIVATED A COOL,
TOUGH, ANGRY DEMEANOR,
1144
01:17:46,463 --> 01:17:50,338
AND HIS RUDENESS--TO FANS
AND TO OTHER MUSICIANS--
1145
01:17:50,463 --> 01:17:54,505
WAS LEGENDARY.
1146
01:17:54,630 --> 01:18:01,630
MILES DAVIS DID NOT TAKE
ANYTHING FROM ANYBODY.
1147
01:18:01,755 --> 01:18:03,797
HE WAS ALSO
POWERFUL ENOUGH
1148
01:18:03,922 --> 01:18:06,630
TO HAVE HIS WAY
WITH WHITE MANAGEMENT.
1149
01:18:06,755 --> 01:18:08,171
IT BOTHERED
DAVIS
1150
01:18:08,338 --> 01:18:11,005
THAT COLUMBIA HAD PUT
A PRETTY BLONDE
1151
01:18:11,171 --> 01:18:13,255
ON THE COVER
OF MILES AHEAD,
1152
01:18:13,380 --> 01:18:16,964
AND WHEN HE RELEASEDSOMEDAY MY PRINCE WILL COME,
1153
01:18:17,088 --> 01:18:20,630
HE INSISTED IT FEATURE
HIS SECOND WIFE, FRANCES.
1154
01:18:20,755 --> 01:18:23,005
MILES HAD STYLE.
1155
01:18:23,129 --> 01:18:25,672
HE HAD SOMETHING THAT WAS
ELECTRIC TO EVERYBODY.
1156
01:18:25,838 --> 01:18:31,421
LADIES JUST--YOU KNOW,
THEY WENT CRAZY OVER HIM.
1157
01:18:31,547 --> 01:18:34,255
HE WAS
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL.
1158
01:18:34,380 --> 01:18:38,630
THE EXHILARATION OF JUST
MILES WALKING ON A STAGE--
1159
01:18:38,755 --> 01:18:41,463
IT WAS A TURN-ON
FOR EVERYBODY.
1160
01:18:41,588 --> 01:18:44,964
HIS LOOK, HIS APPEAL
TO THE MASSES WAS INCREDIBLE,
1161
01:18:45,088 --> 01:18:51,213
LIKE NO OTHER MUSICIAN
I'VE EVER SEEN.
1162
01:18:51,338 --> 01:18:57,129
HIS PERSONALITY,
HIS WHOLE PRESENCE WAS AMAZING.
1163
01:18:57,255 --> 01:18:59,338
HIS WHOLE--
I DON'T KNOW--
1164
01:18:59,505 --> 01:19:01,338
THE VIBRATIONS
IN THE ROOM CHANGED
1165
01:19:01,463 --> 01:19:03,296
WHEN HE WALKED
IN THE ROOM.
1166
01:19:03,421 --> 01:19:04,964
EVERYBODY'S EYES
FOCUSED ON HIM.
1167
01:19:05,088 --> 01:19:07,964
IT WAS, LIKE, HE HAD
SOME MAGICAL, MYSTICAL THINGS
1168
01:19:08,088 --> 01:19:17,672
THAT WAS HAPPENING,
UH, IN HIS PERSONA.
1169
01:19:17,797 --> 01:19:21,505
WE ALL USED TO
ACT LIKE MILES.
1170
01:19:21,672 --> 01:19:24,505
I USED TO TALK TO GIRLS
LIKE I THOUGHT THAT MILES WOULD TALK TO GIRLS.
1171
01:19:24,672 --> 01:19:26,171
YOU KNOW, WE HEARD HE HAD
THIS HOARSE WHISPER,
1172
01:19:26,338 --> 01:19:28,255
SO I'D STAND UP AND TALK
TO WOMEN--GIRLS, LIKE--
1173
01:19:28,380 --> 01:19:29,755
WELL, GIRLS AT THAT TIME,
1174
01:19:29,880 --> 01:19:31,129
"HEY, BABY, WHAT'S HAPPENING?
1175
01:19:31,255 --> 01:19:35,880
WHAT'S GOING ON?"
1176
01:19:36,005 --> 01:19:37,505
BUT HE WAS
THE PERSON
1177
01:19:37,630 --> 01:19:39,672
WHO WAS TALKED ABOUT,
REALLY AS A PERSONALITY,
1178
01:19:39,797 --> 01:19:43,588
MORE SO THAN ELLINGTON
OR MORE SO THAN ANY OF THE OTHER PEOPLE.
1179
01:19:43,713 --> 01:19:45,421
MILES. I MEAN,
HE WAS KNOWN FIRST NAME.
1180
01:19:45,547 --> 01:19:47,171
MILES. MILES THIS,
MILES THAT,
1181
01:19:47,338 --> 01:19:52,171
MILES WITH THE SUITS,
MILES WITH THE WOMEN.
1182
01:19:52,296 --> 01:19:55,046
HE WAS THE JAZZ HERO
FOR MY GENERATION,
1183
01:19:55,171 --> 01:19:58,505
AND THIS CAME ALONG AT THE TIME
OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ERA,
1184
01:19:58,630 --> 01:20:01,338
WHEN MY GENERATION
WAS SORT OF REJECTING LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
1185
01:20:01,463 --> 01:20:03,505
WAS SORT OF REJECTING
THE WHOLE IDEA
1186
01:20:03,630 --> 01:20:05,672
OF A BLACK PERSON
AS AN ENTERTAINER,
1187
01:20:05,797 --> 01:20:09,505
AND THAT WAS
VERY POWERFUL FOR US.
1188
01:20:09,672 --> 01:20:14,588
HIS COOL, THE WAY HE WENT
ABOUT HIS BUSINESS...
1189
01:20:14,713 --> 01:20:20,630
THE, UH, SORT OF
INSIDE/OUTSIDE WAY WITH MILES.
1190
01:20:20,755 --> 01:20:22,797
BECAUSE ON ONE LEVEL,
MILES WAS MR. OUTSIDE
1191
01:20:22,922 --> 01:20:24,338
IN SORT OF HIS STANCE
ABOUT RACE
1192
01:20:24,463 --> 01:20:26,129
OR HIS STANCE
ABOUT MUSIC
1193
01:20:26,255 --> 01:20:28,838
OR HIS SORT OF
F-YOU STANCE ABOUT LIFE.
1194
01:20:29,005 --> 01:20:30,213
BUT HE WAS ALSO
MR. INSIDE.
1195
01:20:30,338 --> 01:20:31,713
HE WAS POPULAR.
HE WAS RESPECTED.
1196
01:20:31,838 --> 01:20:33,338
WHITES AND BLACKS
LIKED HIS MUSIC.
1197
01:20:33,505 --> 01:20:35,797
I MEAN, THERE WERE LOTS
OF THINGS ABOUT MILES
1198
01:20:35,922 --> 01:20:37,421
THAT MADE HIM
VERY ATTRACTIVE THAT WAY.
1199
01:20:42,964 --> 01:20:45,672
BUT FOR ALL
HIS GROWING FAME,
1200
01:20:45,797 --> 01:20:47,505
FOR ALL HIS SUCCESS,
1201
01:20:47,630 --> 01:20:49,672
DAVIS COULD NEVER
COMPLETELY MASK
1202
01:20:49,797 --> 01:20:52,338
HIS DEEP INSECURITY...
1203
01:20:52,463 --> 01:20:58,838
OR CONTROL THE ANGER
THAT WAS SO MUCH A PART OF HIS PERSONALITY.
1204
01:20:58,964 --> 01:21:02,046
NO AMOUNT OF TOUGHNESS
COULD CHANGE THE FACT
1205
01:21:02,171 --> 01:21:07,838
THAT HE WAS STILL A BLACK MAN
IN A WHITE WORLD.
1206
01:21:08,005 --> 01:21:11,838
HE WOULD BE AFRAID TO GO
IN TO THE HOTELS HIMSELF
1207
01:21:12,005 --> 01:21:13,922
TO CHECK ON
OUR RESERVATIONS,
1208
01:21:14,046 --> 01:21:16,505
THINKING BECAUSE HE IS
A BLACK MAN,
1209
01:21:16,672 --> 01:21:20,255
THEY'RE GOING TO SAY, "NO,
WE DON'T HAVE YOUR RESERVATION."
1210
01:21:20,380 --> 01:21:24,922
HE WOULD SEND ME IN
TO TAKE CARE OF THAT PART OF IT.
1211
01:21:25,046 --> 01:21:29,005
I MEAN,
HE REALLY, UM...
1212
01:21:29,171 --> 01:21:38,005
FEARED THE PREJUDICE THAT
DID HAPPEN IN THIS COUNTRY THEN.
1213
01:21:38,129 --> 01:21:39,547
ONE EVENING,
1214
01:21:39,672 --> 01:21:42,005
DAVIS WAS TAKING A BREAK
OUTSIDE BIRDLAND
1215
01:21:42,129 --> 01:21:47,338
WHEN A WHITE POLICEMAN
TOLD HIM TO MOVE ON.
1216
01:21:47,463 --> 01:21:49,421
DAVIS REFUSED.
1217
01:21:49,547 --> 01:21:53,046
"I'M WORKING HERE,"
HE SAID.
1218
01:21:53,171 --> 01:21:58,505
THE OFFICER BEAT HIM BLOODY
WITH HIS BILLY CLUB.
1219
01:21:58,630 --> 01:22:01,672
THAT INCIDENT
AND OTHER INDIGNITIES
1220
01:22:01,797 --> 01:22:07,005
ONLY FUELED DAVIS'
ALIENATION AND RAGE.
1221
01:22:07,171 --> 01:22:10,171
HE HAD FISTFIGHTS
WITH CLUB OWNERS,
1222
01:22:10,296 --> 01:22:14,171
SWORE AT FANS
WHO DARED SPEAK TO HIM.
1223
01:22:14,338 --> 01:22:18,005
HIS PRIVATE LIFE WAS
JUST AS COMPLICATED...
1224
01:22:18,171 --> 01:22:20,255
AND VIOLENT.
1225
01:22:20,380 --> 01:22:25,088
MILES
WAS VERY POSSESSIVE. I WAS HIS POSSESSION.
1226
01:22:25,213 --> 01:22:26,672
HERE I AM,
1227
01:22:26,797 --> 01:22:30,255
THIS BALLERINA WHO'D PERFORMED
ALL OVER THE WORLD,
1228
01:22:30,380 --> 01:22:32,672
ON BROADWAY NOW,
1229
01:22:32,797 --> 01:22:36,755
AND HE COMES TO THE THEATER
ONE EVENING IN HIS FERRARI
1230
01:22:36,880 --> 01:22:38,672
AND SAYS TO ME,
1231
01:22:38,797 --> 01:22:41,838
"FRANCES, A WOMAN
SHOULD BE WITH HER MAN.
1232
01:22:41,964 --> 01:22:46,630
I WANT YOU
OUT OF WEST SIDE STORY."
1233
01:22:46,755 --> 01:22:49,547
I COULDN'T EVEN MENTION
ANOTHER MAN.
1234
01:22:49,672 --> 01:22:53,672
WHEN I MENTIONED
THAT QUINCY JONES WAS HANDSOME,
1235
01:22:53,797 --> 01:22:57,838
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN,
I WAS DOWN FOR THE COUNT.
1236
01:22:57,964 --> 01:23:01,380
I HAD TO CALL THE POLICE
BECAUSE I THOUGHT,
1237
01:23:01,505 --> 01:23:04,755
"THIS IS GOING TO BE
THE END OF ME."
1238
01:23:04,880 --> 01:23:06,338
IT WAS HARD,
1239
01:23:06,463 --> 01:23:12,171
BUT I WAS IN LOVE WITH HIM,
SO I TOOK IT ALL.
1240
01:23:12,296 --> 01:23:15,838
I DIDN'T LOVE MILES DAVIS.
I LOVED DIZZY GILLESPIE.
1241
01:23:16,005 --> 01:23:18,838
I LOVED DUKE ELLINGTON.
I LOVED COUNT BASIE.
1242
01:23:18,964 --> 01:23:20,713
I REALLY LOVED
THOSE PEOPLE.
1243
01:23:20,838 --> 01:23:23,505
I NEVER LOVED MILES DAVIS.
1244
01:23:23,630 --> 01:23:25,672
PEOPLE LOVED
MILES DAVIS,
1245
01:23:25,797 --> 01:23:28,880
BUT IT WAS
A SORT OF A MASOCHISM.
1246
01:23:29,005 --> 01:23:34,338
MILES TREATED EVERYBODY
IN VERY WEIRD WAYS.
1247
01:23:34,463 --> 01:23:35,838
THERE ARE MUSICIANS
OUT THERE NOW
1248
01:23:35,964 --> 01:23:38,755
THAT WORKED WITH MILES
THAT ARE STILL BEING PAINS IN THE ASSES
1249
01:23:38,880 --> 01:23:42,421
BECAUSE THEY LEARNED HOW
TO BE A PAIN IN THE ASS FROM MILES DAVIS,
1250
01:23:42,547 --> 01:23:45,505
AND THEY TRY TO MIMIC HIM
AND IMITATE HIM.
1251
01:23:45,630 --> 01:23:47,421
AND MILES--
IT WORKED FOR MILES.
1252
01:23:47,547 --> 01:23:51,338
I WAS PROUD OF WORKING
WITH MILES. I DIDN'T LOVE HIM.
1253
01:23:56,129 --> 01:23:59,171
DESPITE THE TURMOIL
IN HIS PRIVATE LIFE,
1254
01:23:59,296 --> 01:24:02,338
MILES DAVIS ASTONISHED
THE JAZZ WORLD ONCE AGAIN
1255
01:24:02,463 --> 01:24:05,505
IN 1959.
1256
01:24:05,630 --> 01:24:09,129
HE HAD BROUGHT HIS SEXTET
INTO THE COLUMBIA STUDIOS
1257
01:24:09,255 --> 01:24:11,380
TO MAKE
ANOTHER ALBUM--
1258
01:24:11,505 --> 01:24:15,338
5 ORIGINAL TUNES BUILT
ON SIMPLE SCALES, OR "MODES,"
1259
01:24:15,463 --> 01:24:18,338
RATHER THAN THE COMPLICATED
CHORD PROGRESSIONS
1260
01:24:18,505 --> 01:24:22,838
THAT HAD CHARACTERIZED
BEBOP.
1261
01:24:23,005 --> 01:24:25,171
THIS OPENED UP THE WORLD
FOR IMPROVISERS
1262
01:24:25,338 --> 01:24:28,505
BECAUSE THEY COULD
GET AWAY FROM THE-- ALMOST THE GYMNASTICS
1263
01:24:28,672 --> 01:24:32,338
OF POPPING THROUGH
ALL OF THESE COMPLICATED HARMONIC LABYRINTHS
1264
01:24:32,505 --> 01:24:35,255
AND JUST CONCENTRATE
ON INVENTING MELODY,
1265
01:24:35,380 --> 01:24:37,797
BECAUSE THE HARMONY
DIDN'T CHANGE.
1266
01:24:37,922 --> 01:24:41,046
THE GUYS WHO HAD BEEN BEBOPPING
THROUGH ALL THOSE CHORDS
1267
01:24:41,171 --> 01:24:42,630
FOR ALL THOSE YEARS
1268
01:24:42,755 --> 01:24:44,547
WERE NATURALLY FALLING
INTO CERTAIN CLICHES,
1269
01:24:44,672 --> 01:24:46,713
CERTAIN EASY KINDS
OF PHRASES.
1270
01:24:46,838 --> 01:24:50,505
MILES FORCED THEM
OUT OF IT.
1271
01:24:50,630 --> 01:24:54,338
DAVIS WAS
COMMITTED TO GETTING SOMETHING SPONTANEOUS
1272
01:24:54,463 --> 01:24:56,713
OUT OF HIS MUSICIANS.
1273
01:24:56,838 --> 01:25:01,380
NONE OF HIS MEN
EVER SAW ANY OF HIS NEW TUNES
1274
01:25:01,505 --> 01:25:04,713
BEFORE THEY GOT
TO THE RECORDING SESSION.
1275
01:25:04,838 --> 01:25:06,463
WHEN MILES CAME IN,
1276
01:25:06,588 --> 01:25:08,838
HE COMES UP WITH LITTLE
SCRAPS OF PAPER--
1277
01:25:08,964 --> 01:25:12,005
LITTLE BITTY PIECES
OF PAPER--AND SAYS, "THERE'S YOUR PART.
1278
01:25:12,129 --> 01:25:14,797
THERE'S YOUR PART.
THERE'S YOUR PART. THERE'S YOUR PART."
1279
01:25:14,922 --> 01:25:16,296
BUT HE WANTED
THAT TENSION,
1280
01:25:16,421 --> 01:25:18,296
AND HE KNEW THAT THEY
WERE GREAT MUSICIANS.
1281
01:25:18,421 --> 01:25:21,964
HE TOLD ME THE TRICK WAS TO PICK
GREAT MUSICIANS WHEN YOU DO THAT
1282
01:25:22,088 --> 01:25:24,338
BECAUSE HE HAD LEARNED THAT KIND
OF TECHNIQUE FROM BIRD.
1283
01:25:24,505 --> 01:25:26,171
SO YOU PUT THEM
IN THAT SPOT,
1284
01:25:26,338 --> 01:25:28,046
YOU GIVE THEM
A LITTLE BIT OF SOMETHING,
1285
01:25:28,171 --> 01:25:29,964
AND THEN IF IT'S
A GREAT MUSICIAN,
1286
01:25:30,088 --> 01:25:40,171
THEN THEY KIND OF
PLAY BEYOND THEMSELVES.
1287
01:25:40,296 --> 01:25:43,547
THE GREAT
MUSICIANS WHO ROSE TO THEIR LEADER'S CHALLENGE
1288
01:25:43,672 --> 01:25:47,547
INCLUDED TENOR SAXOPHONE STAR
JOHN COLTRANE...
1289
01:25:47,672 --> 01:25:52,213
ALTO SAXOPHONIST
JULIAN "CANNONBALL" ADDERLEY...
1290
01:25:52,338 --> 01:25:57,922
BASSIST PAUL CHAMBERS,
JIMMY COBB ON DRUMS...
1291
01:25:58,046 --> 01:26:00,755
AND A NEW
AND LITTLE-KNOWN PIANIST,
1292
01:26:00,880 --> 01:26:02,838
BILL EVANS.
1293
01:26:02,964 --> 01:26:05,171
AND THIS
WAS A TIME
1294
01:26:05,296 --> 01:26:09,171
WHEN THERE WAS A GREAT DEAL
OF FIERCE REJECTION
1295
01:26:09,296 --> 01:26:11,838
AMONG SOME YOUNGER
BLACK MUSICIANS
1296
01:26:11,964 --> 01:26:15,296
OF THE IDEA "A," THAT WHITES
COULD PLAY THE MUSIC,
1297
01:26:15,421 --> 01:26:16,838
BUT, MORE TO THE POINT,
1298
01:26:16,964 --> 01:26:20,171
THAT WHITES SHOULDN'T BE TAKING
AWAY JOBS FROM JAZZ MUSICIANS.
1299
01:26:20,296 --> 01:26:23,005
AND THIS COINCIDED
WITH THE GREAT POPULAR--
1300
01:26:23,129 --> 01:26:28,005
GREAT FOR JAZZ--POPULAR INTEREST
IN SO-CALLED WEST COAST JAZZ,
1301
01:26:28,129 --> 01:26:31,213
WHICH WAS ALMOST ENTIRELY WHITE,
WAS PRETTY BLAND,
1302
01:26:31,338 --> 01:26:34,547
AND THOSE PEOPLE
WERE MAKING A LOT OF MONEY.
1303
01:26:34,672 --> 01:26:40,005
SO HERE HE HIRES
BILL EVANS.
1304
01:26:40,129 --> 01:26:42,505
WHEN IT CAME TO MUSIC,
1305
01:26:42,630 --> 01:26:50,338
COLOR DIDN'T MATTER
TO MILES DAVIS.
1306
01:26:50,463 --> 01:26:52,838
EVANS' PLAYING, HE SAID,
1307
01:26:52,964 --> 01:26:57,880
ADDED A "QUIET FIRE"
TO HIS GROUP.
1308
01:26:58,005 --> 01:27:00,338
IT REMINDED HIM
1309
01:27:00,463 --> 01:27:10,213
OF "SPARKLING WATER CASCADING
DOWN FROM SOME CLEAR WATERFALL."
1310
01:27:10,338 --> 01:27:12,046
THE ALBUM
DAVIS AND EVANS
1311
01:27:12,171 --> 01:27:15,129
AND THE OTHER MEMBERS
OF THE SEXTET PRODUCED TOGETHER,
1312
01:27:15,255 --> 01:27:17,213
KIND OF BLUE,
1313
01:27:17,338 --> 01:28:03,672
IS THE BEST-SELLING JAZZ ALBUM
OF ALL TIME.
1314
01:28:31,129 --> 01:28:33,588
MUSIC IS
ONE OF THE FEW THINGS
1315
01:28:33,713 --> 01:28:37,255
THAT INVOLVES YOUR BODY,
YOUR EMOTIONS, YOUR MIND,
1316
01:28:37,380 --> 01:28:38,880
AND YOUR SPIRIT,
1317
01:28:39,005 --> 01:28:49,672
ALL OPERATING
SIMULTANEOUSLY.
1318
01:28:49,797 --> 01:28:51,672
YOU'RE PLAYING.
YOUR BODY IS INVOLVED.
1319
01:28:51,797 --> 01:28:52,880
YOU'RE FEELING EMOTIONS,
1320
01:28:53,005 --> 01:28:55,171
YOU WANT TO EXPRESS
SOMETHING EMOTIONALLY.
1321
01:28:55,296 --> 01:28:56,797
YOUR MIND IS ACTIVE.
1322
01:28:56,922 --> 01:28:59,547
IT'S CONSTRUCTING STRUCTURES
OVER THE CHORD CHANGES
1323
01:28:59,672 --> 01:29:01,338
OF THIS
PARTICULAR TUNE.
1324
01:29:01,463 --> 01:29:02,964
AND YOUR SPIRIT.
1325
01:29:03,088 --> 01:29:06,005
IF YOU'RE--IT'S
A PRAYERFUL KIND OF THING,
1326
01:29:06,129 --> 01:29:10,213
SO IN THAT SENSE,
IT'S A VERY RARE GIFT TO BE A MUSICIAN,
1327
01:29:10,338 --> 01:29:13,296
TO BE ABLE TO SPONTANEOUSLY,
AS A JAZZ MUSICIAN,
1328
01:29:13,421 --> 01:29:14,964
HAVE CONVERSATIONS
WITH OTHER PEOPLE
1329
01:29:15,088 --> 01:29:18,005
IN WHICH ALL OF THE PARTS
OF THEMSELVES ARE EMBODIED
1330
01:29:18,129 --> 01:29:23,880
AND HAPPENING
AT THE SAME TIME.
1331
01:29:24,005 --> 01:29:26,213
JAZZ MUSIC IS EXISTENCE MUSIC.
1332
01:29:26,338 --> 01:29:28,755
IT DOESN'T TAKE YOU OUT
OF THE WORLD.
1333
01:29:28,880 --> 01:29:34,880
IT PUTS YOU IN THE WORLD
AND MAKES YOU DEAL WITH IT.
1334
01:29:35,005 --> 01:29:36,838
IT'S NOT THE KIND OF THING
1335
01:29:36,964 --> 01:29:40,880
OF A RELIGIOSITY OF,
YOU KNOW, "THOU MUST."
1336
01:29:41,005 --> 01:29:45,672
IT'S NOT.
IT SAYS, "THIS IS,"
1337
01:29:45,797 --> 01:29:47,171
AND THAT'S IT.
"THIS IS."
1338
01:29:47,296 --> 01:29:50,672
IT DEALS WITH THE PRESENT. YES.
ALL OF THAT IS WHAT HAPPENS.
1339
01:29:50,797 --> 01:29:53,838
THERE'S A GUY--SOMEBODY WAS
LAYING OUT DRUNK IN THE STREET.
1340
01:29:53,964 --> 01:29:55,713
IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
THE CAT WHO'S PLAYING.
1341
01:29:55,838 --> 01:29:57,880
IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
CHARLIE PARKER.
1342
01:29:58,005 --> 01:30:00,005
BUT THAT FACT
DOESN'T ALTER THE POWER--
1343
01:30:00,129 --> 01:30:02,505
THAT IS THE POWER
OF WHAT HE'S SAYING.
1344
01:30:02,672 --> 01:30:05,380
"YES, I DID THAT,
AND I ALSO DO THIS."
1345
01:30:05,505 --> 01:30:11,213
IT'S THE RANGE OF HUMANITY
THAT'S IN THIS MUSIC.
1346
01:30:11,338 --> 01:30:13,005
JOHN WILLIAM COLTRANE,
1347
01:30:13,129 --> 01:30:15,296
LIKE ALL GREAT
JAZZ INNOVATORS,
1348
01:30:15,421 --> 01:30:19,338
SOUGHT TO TAKE THE MUSIC
TO PLACES IT HAD NEVER BEEN
1349
01:30:19,463 --> 01:30:23,588
AND BECAME IN THE PROCESS--
TO SOME OF HIS ADMIRERS--
1350
01:30:23,713 --> 01:30:25,838
SOMETHING LIKE A SAVIOR
1351
01:30:26,005 --> 01:30:30,171
AND AN INSPIRATION
TO A WHOLE GENERATION OF YOUNG MUSICIANS.
1352
01:30:30,338 --> 01:30:33,046
COLTRANE
IS LIKE THE FATHER.
1353
01:30:33,171 --> 01:30:36,463
HE IS ONE OF THE ONES
THAT REALLY LED US
1354
01:30:36,588 --> 01:30:38,005
INTO THIS SPIRITUAL QUEST,
1355
01:30:38,171 --> 01:30:39,630
WHO REALLY MADE
PEOPLE AWARE
1356
01:30:39,755 --> 01:30:42,005
OF THE SPIRITUALITY
OF JAZZ.
1357
01:30:42,129 --> 01:30:44,380
THIS HAD EXISTED
FOR YEARS BEFORE,
1358
01:30:44,505 --> 01:30:47,338
BUT COLTRANE WAS PUTTING IT
ON ANOTHER LEVEL.
1359
01:30:47,463 --> 01:30:49,838
HE WAS BRINGING IT
TO THE FOREFRONT.
1360
01:31:03,005 --> 01:31:05,338
HE WAS BORN IN 1926,
1361
01:31:05,463 --> 01:31:08,505
IN A LITTLE NORTH CAROLINA TOWN
CALLED HAMLET,
1362
01:31:08,630 --> 01:31:10,672
GREW UP IN HIGH POINT,
1363
01:31:10,797 --> 01:31:14,838
AND MOVED TO PHILADELPHIA
AS A TEENAGER.
1364
01:31:14,964 --> 01:31:16,713
THERE, HE STUDIED SAXOPHONE
1365
01:31:16,838 --> 01:31:18,421
AT 2 DIFFERENT
CONSERVATORIES,
1366
01:31:18,547 --> 01:31:22,421
PLAYED RHYTHM AND BLUES,
LISTENED TO LESTER YOUNG,
1367
01:31:22,547 --> 01:31:31,838
THEN GOT A JOB WITH A BIG BAND
LED BY DIZZY GILLESPIE.
1368
01:31:32,005 --> 01:31:35,088
HE FIRST WON FAME
PLAYING WITH MILES DAVIS,
1369
01:31:35,213 --> 01:31:38,171
BUT DAVIS LET HIM GO
FOR A TIME
1370
01:31:38,338 --> 01:31:43,421
BECAUSE HE HAD BECOME
ADDICTED TO HEROIN.
1371
01:31:43,547 --> 01:31:48,129
IN 1957, WHILE PLAYING
WITH THELONIOUS MONK,
1372
01:31:48,255 --> 01:31:50,088
COLTRANE UNDERWENT
1373
01:31:50,213 --> 01:31:54,838
WHAT HE CALLED
A "SPIRITUAL AWAKENING."
1374
01:31:55,005 --> 01:31:58,338
HE GAVE UP DRUGS,
LIQUOR, CIGARETTES,
1375
01:31:58,505 --> 01:32:02,755
BEGAN TO STUDY EASTERN RELIGIONS
AND EASTERN AND AFRICAN MUSIC,
1376
01:32:02,880 --> 01:32:05,672
INITIATING A RELENTLESS SEARCH
FOR MEANING
1377
01:32:05,838 --> 01:32:08,505
THAT HE NEVER
ABANDONED.
1378
01:32:08,672 --> 01:32:12,797
FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE,
JOHN COLTRANE SEEMED DETERMINED
1379
01:32:12,922 --> 01:32:16,630
TO FILL HIS MUSIC
WITH MORE OF EVERYTHING--
1380
01:32:16,755 --> 01:32:25,838
MORE NOTES, MORE IDEAS,
MORE ENERGY.
1381
01:32:25,964 --> 01:32:29,005
JOHN COLTRANE
NEVER RESTED.
1382
01:32:29,171 --> 01:32:31,171
HE ALWAYS NEEDED TO MOVE.
1383
01:32:31,338 --> 01:32:33,338
ONCE HE DISCOVERED
ONE THING,
1384
01:32:33,505 --> 01:32:37,505
HE REALIZED 10, 20 MORE THINGS
THAT THERE WERE TO DISCOVER.
1385
01:32:37,672 --> 01:32:39,588
HE KEPT ON
PUSHING HIMSELF,
1386
01:32:39,713 --> 01:32:42,838
AND HE NEVER ALLOWED HIS ART
TO EITHER STAGNATE
1387
01:32:43,005 --> 01:32:44,505
OR TO EVEN REST.
1388
01:32:44,672 --> 01:32:49,171
IT WAS CONSTANTLY MOVING.
1389
01:32:49,296 --> 01:32:52,338
JOHN COLTRANE RAISED
THE STANDARDS
1390
01:32:52,463 --> 01:33:02,838
OF WHAT IT MEANS TO BE
A DEDICATED MUSICIAN.
1391
01:33:02,964 --> 01:33:04,922
LIKE HIS FRIEND
SONNY ROLLINS,
1392
01:33:05,046 --> 01:33:09,088
HE SEEMED UNABLE
TO PUT HIS MUSIC ASIDE EVEN FOR A MOMENT.
1393
01:33:09,213 --> 01:33:11,588
HE AND ROLLINS ROUTINELY
PHONED ONE ANOTHER,
1394
01:33:11,713 --> 01:33:14,630
PLAYED A PHRASE OR TWO
INTO THE RECEIVER,
1395
01:33:14,755 --> 01:33:18,213
THEN HUNG UP AND WAITED
FOR THE OTHER TO CALL BACK
1396
01:33:18,338 --> 01:33:20,505
WITH A MUSICAL ANSWER
OF HIS OWN.
1397
01:33:33,046 --> 01:33:36,797
I CONSIDER ONE
OF THE REALLY DEFINING RECORDINGS OF COLTRANE
1398
01:33:36,922 --> 01:33:40,171
TO BE CHASIN' THE TRAIN,
WHICH HE MADE IN 1961.
1399
01:33:40,338 --> 01:33:47,505
HE RECORDED IT LIVE
AT THE VILLAGE VANGUARD.
1400
01:33:47,630 --> 01:33:56,005
IT WAS A 16-MINUTE SOLO
ON ONE SIDE OF A RECORD.
1401
01:33:56,171 --> 01:33:59,046
HE PLAYS ABOUT 80 CHORUSES.
I ONCE TRIED TO COUNT.
1402
01:33:59,171 --> 01:34:01,547
IT'S ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE
NOT TO GET LOST,
1403
01:34:01,672 --> 01:34:04,213
BECAUSE HE KEEPS TRYING TO
BREAK THROUGH THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BLUES,
1404
01:34:04,338 --> 01:34:06,713
AND THE RHYTHM SECTION
KEEPS HOLDING HIM BACK A LITTLE BIT,
1405
01:34:06,838 --> 01:34:16,171
BUT YOU CAN JUST FEEL HIM
CHAMPING AT THE BIT.
1406
01:34:16,296 --> 01:34:20,672
NOW, OF COURSE,
TO A LOT OF PEOPLE, THEY COULDN'T GET IT,
1407
01:34:20,838 --> 01:34:23,129
BECAUSE IT SEEMED REPETITIOUS
OR MONOTONOUS.
1408
01:34:23,255 --> 01:34:26,463
THE IDEA HERE, THOUGH,
WAS THE EFFUSIVENESS.
1409
01:34:26,588 --> 01:34:29,505
THAT WAS WHAT WAS--IT WASN'T
ABOUT DETAIL ANYMORE.
1410
01:34:29,630 --> 01:34:33,255
IT WASN'T ABOUT, "GEE,
THAT'S A PERFECT 12-BAR LOUIS ARMSTRONG SOLO
1411
01:34:33,380 --> 01:34:35,964
WHERE EVERY NOTE COUNTS
AS IF IN A POEM."
1412
01:34:36,088 --> 01:34:37,505
THIS WASN'T A POEM.
1413
01:34:37,672 --> 01:34:44,338
THIS WAS
A VERY LONG NOVEL.
1414
01:34:44,463 --> 01:34:49,046
AND, LIKE IN TOLSTOY, IT'S NOT
ABOUT EVERY WORD BEING RIGHT.
1415
01:34:49,171 --> 01:34:51,046
IT'S
THE OVERWHELMING EFFECT.
1416
01:34:51,171 --> 01:34:54,505
AND IT JUST PINNED
YOUR EARS BACK,
1417
01:34:54,630 --> 01:34:58,672
AND YOU KNEW
THAT YOU WERE IN A NEW WORLD,
1418
01:34:58,797 --> 01:35:01,505
A BRAVE NEW LAND
FOR JAZZ.
1419
01:35:12,505 --> 01:35:17,129
IN 1961,
COLTRANE FORMED A NEW QUARTET--
1420
01:35:17,255 --> 01:35:19,505
McCOY TYNER
AT THE PIANO,
1421
01:35:19,672 --> 01:35:21,547
JIMMY GARRISON ON BASS,
1422
01:35:21,672 --> 01:35:25,171
AND ELVIN JONES,
A MASTER OF COMPLEX RHYTHMS,
1423
01:35:25,296 --> 01:35:33,505
ON DRUMS.
1424
01:35:33,630 --> 01:35:35,672
COLTRANE HIMSELF
NOW OFTEN PLAYED
1425
01:35:35,797 --> 01:35:37,213
THE SOPRANO SAXOPHONE,
1426
01:35:37,338 --> 01:35:40,213
THE INSTRUMENT THE NEW ORLEANS
MASTER SIDNEY BECHET
1427
01:35:40,338 --> 01:35:52,505
HAD INTRODUCED
TO JAZZ.
1428
01:35:52,630 --> 01:35:53,922
THEIR STUNNING
TRANSFORMATION
1429
01:35:54,046 --> 01:35:56,922
OF THE SENTIMENTAL HIT
FROM THE SOUND OF MUSIC--
1430
01:35:57,046 --> 01:35:58,505
MY FAVORITE THINGS--
1431
01:35:58,630 --> 01:36:02,338
BECAME THE FIRST JAZZ CUT
SINCE DAVE BRUBECK'S TAKE FIVE
1432
01:36:02,463 --> 01:36:13,505
TO RECEIVE WIDE PLAY
ON THE RADIO.
1433
01:36:13,630 --> 01:36:16,755
SOON, JOHN COLTRANE
WAS MAKING MORE MONEY
1434
01:36:16,880 --> 01:36:31,129
THAN ANY OTHER JAZZ MUSICIAN
EXCEPT MILES DAVIS.
1435
01:36:31,255 --> 01:36:34,046
BUT COLTRANE
BARELY NOTICED.
1436
01:36:34,171 --> 01:36:36,838
THE MUSIC WAS ALL
THAT SEEMED TO MATTER TO HIM,
1437
01:36:36,964 --> 01:36:39,005
AND THE MEN WITH WHOM HE PLAYED
1438
01:36:39,129 --> 01:36:41,005
SHARED HIS ALMOST
MYSTICAL BELIEF
1439
01:36:41,129 --> 01:36:54,171
IN THE IMPORTANCE OF WHAT
THEY WERE DOING TOGETHER.
1440
01:36:54,296 --> 01:36:57,213
THE ENERGY,
THE POWER THAT CAME OUT OF THAT GROUP
1441
01:36:57,338 --> 01:37:02,005
WAS JUST ASTONISHING.
1442
01:37:02,129 --> 01:37:06,880
I GUESS MY MOST VIVID MEMORIES
OF BIRDLAND ARE SEEING COLTRANE.
1443
01:37:07,005 --> 01:37:08,380
IN THE PEANUT GALLERY,
1444
01:37:08,505 --> 01:37:09,880
THE TABLES WERE
VERY NICELY SPACED,
1445
01:37:10,005 --> 01:37:12,046
AND I REMEMBER
WE USED TO JUST GET UP
1446
01:37:12,171 --> 01:37:21,505
AND DANCE
TO JOHN COLTRANE.
1447
01:37:21,630 --> 01:37:48,838
IT WAS AS CLOSE TO HAVING
A RELIGION AS I EVER GOT.
1448
01:38:15,171 --> 01:38:17,588
LOUIS ARMSTRONG
AND DUKE ELLINGTON,
1449
01:38:17,713 --> 01:38:20,088
CHARLIE PARKER
AND DIZZY GILLESPIE,
1450
01:38:20,213 --> 01:38:23,213
SONNY ROLLINS AND MILES DAVIS
AND JOHN COLTRANE
1451
01:38:23,338 --> 01:38:25,672
HAD MADE THEIR
INDIVIDUAL STATEMENTS
1452
01:38:25,838 --> 01:38:28,463
WHILE WORKING WITHIN
ESTABLISHED RHYTHM AND HARMONY
1453
01:38:28,588 --> 01:38:31,880
AND SEQUENCES
OF CHORDS.
1454
01:38:32,005 --> 01:38:36,505
ONE MAN REJECTED
ALL OF THAT.
1455
01:38:36,672 --> 01:38:40,380
JAZZ, HE SAID,
MUST BE "FREE."
1456
01:38:40,505 --> 01:38:47,338
HIS NAME WAS
ORNETTE COLEMAN.
1457
01:38:47,463 --> 01:38:50,463
"THE THEME YOU PLAY
AT THE START OF A NUMBER
1458
01:38:50,588 --> 01:38:52,338
IS THE TERRITORY,"
HE SAID,
1459
01:38:52,463 --> 01:38:56,672
"AND WHAT COMES AFTER, WHICH MAY
HAVE VERY LITTLE TO DO WITH IT,
1460
01:38:56,797 --> 01:39:00,505
IS THE ADVENTURE."
1461
01:39:00,630 --> 01:39:04,838
AT SOME POINT, IF YOU
GO FAR ENOUGH OUT OF THE CHORDS,
1462
01:39:04,964 --> 01:39:06,421
THE QUESTION ARISES,
1463
01:39:06,547 --> 01:39:08,129
"WHY USE THE CHORDS
AT ALL?
1464
01:39:08,255 --> 01:39:11,672
"WHAT WOULD HAPPEN
IF WE GET RID OF THE CHORDS,
1465
01:39:11,797 --> 01:39:14,129
"AND WE DON'T HAVE
A HARMONIC CONTOUR?
1466
01:39:14,255 --> 01:39:16,005
WHAT IF WE JUST
IMPROVISE MELODICALLY?"
1467
01:39:16,129 --> 01:39:20,880
OK. ANOTHER QUESTION IS,
"WHY DO WE HAVE TO PLAY 4/4 TIME ALL THE TIME?
1468
01:39:21,005 --> 01:39:22,463
"I MEAN,
WHERE IS THAT WRITTEN?
1469
01:39:22,588 --> 01:39:24,630
"WHAT WOULD HAPPEN
IF WE DON'T?
1470
01:39:24,755 --> 01:39:27,672
"WHAT IF THE DRUMMER COULD
IMPROVISE A KIND OF TIME
1471
01:39:27,797 --> 01:39:30,547
"THAT RESPONDS MOMENT TO MOMENT
TO WHATEVER THE SOLOIST
1472
01:39:30,672 --> 01:39:32,505
"OR WHATEVER
THE ENSEMBLE IS PLAYING?
1473
01:39:32,672 --> 01:39:36,171
"AND IF YOU DON'T HAVE
CHORDS AND IF YOU DON'T HAVE STANDARD TIME,
1474
01:39:36,296 --> 01:39:38,046
"WHAT DOES
THE BASS PLAYER DO?
1475
01:39:38,171 --> 01:39:42,838
"HOW DOES HE FIND
HIS PLACE?
1476
01:39:42,964 --> 01:39:47,046
AND ORNETTE COLEMAN PUT TOGETHER
A QUARTET THAT DID THAT.
1477
01:39:47,171 --> 01:39:49,338
IT PLAYED A FREE MUSIC.
1478
01:39:57,296 --> 01:39:59,338
IN A LOS ANGELES GARAGE,
1479
01:39:59,463 --> 01:40:00,838
ORNETTE COLEMAN
BROUGHT TOGETHER
1480
01:40:00,964 --> 01:40:05,922
A GROUP OF LIKE-MINDED
BUT MUCH YOUNGER MUSICIANS--
1481
01:40:06,046 --> 01:40:10,129
THE TRUMPET PLAYER
DON CHERRY,
1482
01:40:10,255 --> 01:40:13,630
THE DRUMMER
BILLY HIGGINS,
1483
01:40:13,755 --> 01:40:17,129
AND A 22-YEAR-OLD BASS PLAYER
FROM THE OZARKS
1484
01:40:17,255 --> 01:40:21,213
WHO HAD ONCE PLAYED ON THE STAGE
OF THE GRAND OLE OPRY,
1485
01:40:21,338 --> 01:40:26,713
CHARLIE HADEN.
1486
01:40:26,838 --> 01:40:31,005
HE INVITED ME
OVER TO HIS APARTMENT, AND WE ARRIVED.
1487
01:40:31,129 --> 01:40:34,463
HE OPENED THE DOOR.
MUSIC WAS EVERYWHERE--
1488
01:40:34,588 --> 01:40:37,046
ON THE RUG, ON THE BED,
ON THE TABLES.
1489
01:40:37,171 --> 01:40:39,672
I UNCOVERED MY BASS.
HE REACHED DOWN,
1490
01:40:39,797 --> 01:40:43,171
AND HE PICKED UP A MANUSCRIPT,
AND HE SAID, "LET'S PLAY THIS."
1491
01:40:43,296 --> 01:40:45,672
I SAID, "OK."
I WAS REAL SCARED, YOU KNOW.
1492
01:40:45,797 --> 01:40:47,838
HE SAYS, "NOW, I'VE
WRITTEN THE MELODY HERE.
1493
01:40:47,964 --> 01:40:49,880
"UNDERNEATH IT
ARE THE CHORD CHANGES.
1494
01:40:50,005 --> 01:40:53,380
"THOSE ARE
THE CHORD CHANGES I HEARD WHEN I WROTE THIS MELODY,
1495
01:40:53,505 --> 01:40:54,838
"BUT WHEN WE START TO PLAY,
1496
01:40:54,964 --> 01:40:57,838
"AFTER I PLAY THE MELODY
AND I START TO IMPROVISE,
1497
01:40:58,005 --> 01:41:01,171
"YOU PLAY THE CHANGES.
YOU MAKE UP NEW CHANGES THAT YOU'RE HEARING
1498
01:41:01,296 --> 01:41:13,005
FROM WHAT I'M PLAYING
AND FROM THE TUNE."
1499
01:41:13,171 --> 01:41:17,005
AND I THOUGHT TO MYSELF,
"SOMEBODY'S FINALLY GIVING ME PERMISSION
1500
01:41:17,171 --> 01:41:25,046
TO DO SOMETHING THAT
I'VE--WHAT I'VE BEEN HEARING ALL THIS TIME."
1501
01:41:25,171 --> 01:41:27,005
AND WE STARTED TO PLAY,
1502
01:41:27,129 --> 01:41:31,838
AND A WHOLE NEW WORLD
OPENED UP FOR ME.
1503
01:41:31,964 --> 01:41:36,964
IT WAS LIKE,
UH, BEING BORN AGAIN.
1504
01:41:37,088 --> 01:41:42,505
I WAS HEARING MUSIC SO MUCH
MORE DEEPLY THAN I'D EVER HEARD.
1505
01:41:42,672 --> 01:41:45,755
IT'S LIKE
A DESPERATE URGENCY
1506
01:41:45,880 --> 01:41:52,338
TO IMPROVISE
COMPLETELY NEW.
1507
01:41:52,463 --> 01:41:55,129
WE USED TO TALK
ABOUT IT AS IF--
1508
01:41:55,255 --> 01:42:05,005
PLAYING MUSIC AS IF YOU'VE
NEVER HEARD MUSIC BEFORE.
1509
01:42:05,129 --> 01:42:08,505
AND WE PLAYED ALL NIGHT,
ALL DAY, ALL NIGHT, ALL DAY.
1510
01:42:08,672 --> 01:42:12,338
I THINK WE TOOK A BREAK
TO GO GET SOME FOOD,
1511
01:42:12,463 --> 01:42:17,005
AND WE PLAYED
FOR ABOUT 2 DAYS.
1512
01:42:17,129 --> 01:42:26,505
THAT WAS MY FIRST EXPERIENCE
PLAYING WITH ORNETTE.
1513
01:42:26,630 --> 01:42:30,505
COLEMAN MANAGED
TO FIND A SMALL LABEL WILLING TO BACK HIM,
1514
01:42:30,630 --> 01:42:33,838
AND HE MADE 2 ALBUMS.
1515
01:42:33,964 --> 01:42:41,338
SLOWLY, HIS REPUTATION
BEGAN TO GROW.
1516
01:42:41,463 --> 01:42:44,380
IN NOVEMBER OF 1959,
ORNETTE COLEMAN
1517
01:42:44,505 --> 01:42:46,296
BROUGHT
HIS NEW SOUND
1518
01:42:46,421 --> 01:42:49,046
TO THE CENTER
OF THE JAZZ WORLD--
1519
01:42:49,171 --> 01:42:53,338
NEW YORK CITY.
1520
01:42:53,463 --> 01:42:54,838
THE FIVE SPOT,
1521
01:42:54,964 --> 01:42:56,505
IN MANHATTAN'S
EAST VILLAGE,
1522
01:42:56,630 --> 01:42:58,171
WAS A FAVORITE HANGOUT
1523
01:42:58,296 --> 01:43:00,213
FOR THE ABSTRACT
EXPRESSIONIST PAINTERS--
1524
01:43:00,338 --> 01:43:05,421
FRANZ KLINE, WILLEM DE KOONING,
JACKSON POLLOCK.
1525
01:43:05,547 --> 01:43:07,838
ITS MANAGEMENT
PRIDED ITSELF
1526
01:43:07,964 --> 01:43:11,922
ON FEATURING THE MOST
ADVENTUROUS MUSICIANS IN TOWN,
1527
01:43:12,046 --> 01:43:14,672
AND NOTHING WAS
MORE ANTICIPATED
1528
01:43:14,797 --> 01:43:18,046
THAN THE ARRIVAL
OF THE ORNETTE COLEMAN QUARTET.
1529
01:43:31,755 --> 01:43:34,547
THE FIRST NIGHT
I PLAYED AT THE FIVE SPOT,
1530
01:43:34,672 --> 01:43:37,838
I WAS UNCOVERING MY BASS,
BILLY WAS PUTTING UP HIS DRUMS,
1531
01:43:37,964 --> 01:43:41,505
AND CHERRY WAS GETTING
HIS HORN, ORNETTE WAS GETTING HIS HORN OUT,
1532
01:43:41,630 --> 01:43:43,838
AND I LOOKED
UP AT THE BAR,
1533
01:43:43,964 --> 01:43:45,630
WHICH WAS FACING
THE STAGE,
1534
01:43:45,755 --> 01:43:49,380
AND STANDING ALONG THE BAR
WAS WILBUR WARE, UH...
1535
01:43:49,505 --> 01:43:52,338
CHARLIE MINGUS, PAUL CHAMBERS,
PERCY HEATH,
1536
01:43:52,505 --> 01:43:55,838
EVERY GREAT BASS PLAYER
IN NEW YORK CITY WAS STANDING THERE,
1537
01:43:55,964 --> 01:43:57,838
STARING ME
RIGHT IN THE FACE.
1538
01:43:57,964 --> 01:44:05,171
AND I SAID, FROM THAT MOMENT ON,
I CLOSE MY EYES.
1539
01:44:05,296 --> 01:44:10,213
I THINK WE PLAYED THERE
FOR 4 MONTHS, 6 NIGHTS A WEEK,
1540
01:44:10,338 --> 01:44:14,630
AND EVERY NIGHT,
THE PLACE WAS PACKED.
1541
01:44:14,755 --> 01:44:16,838
ONE NIGHT I WAS PLAYING
WITH MY EYES CLOSED AGAIN,
1542
01:44:16,964 --> 01:44:18,380
AND I'M PLAYING,
1543
01:44:18,505 --> 01:44:20,505
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN,
I OPEN MY EYES,
1544
01:44:20,672 --> 01:44:22,046
AND SOMEBODY'S
UP ON THE STAGE
1545
01:44:22,171 --> 01:44:24,129
WITH HIS EAR TO THE "F" HOLE
OF MY BASS.
1546
01:44:24,255 --> 01:44:26,005
AND I LOOKED OVER
AT ORNETTE,
1547
01:44:26,129 --> 01:44:28,005
AND I SAID, I SAID,
"COLEMAN, WHO IS THIS?
1548
01:44:28,129 --> 01:44:29,672
MAN, GET HIM
OFF THIS BANDSTAND."
1549
01:44:29,797 --> 01:44:36,713
HE SAYS, "THAT'S
LEONARD BERNSTEIN."
1550
01:44:36,838 --> 01:44:39,505
BERNSTEIN PRONOUNCED
ORNETTE COLEMAN A GENIUS,
1551
01:44:39,630 --> 01:44:42,338
AND LIONEL HAMPTON
ASKED TO SIT IN...
1552
01:44:42,463 --> 01:44:44,171
BUT TRUMPETER
ROY ELDRIDGE
1553
01:44:44,296 --> 01:44:48,713
SAID HE'D LISTENED TO HIM DRUNK
AND HE'D LISTENED TO HIM SOBER
1554
01:44:48,838 --> 01:44:53,005
AND HE COULDN'T UNDERSTAND HIM
EITHER WAY.
1555
01:44:53,129 --> 01:44:56,672
MILES DAVIS DECLARED HIM
"ALL SCREWED-UP INSIDE,"
1556
01:44:56,797 --> 01:45:03,171
BUT JOHN COLTRANE CAME TO PLAY
WITH HIM BETWEEN SETS.
1557
01:45:03,296 --> 01:45:08,672
COLEMAN SAW HIMSELF AS SOLIDLY
IN THE JAZZ TRADITION.
1558
01:45:08,797 --> 01:45:11,463
"BIRD WOULD HAVE
UNDERSTOOD US," HE SAID.
1559
01:45:11,588 --> 01:45:14,005
"HE WOULD HAVE APPROVED
OF OUR ASPIRING
1560
01:45:14,129 --> 01:45:29,296
TO SOMETHING BEYOND
WHAT WE INHERITED."
1561
01:45:29,421 --> 01:45:33,463
A LOT OF PEOPLE
IN THE MID-FIFTIES
1562
01:45:33,588 --> 01:45:37,630
WERE ALREADY PLAYING MUSIC
THAT HAD AN OPEN CONCEPT,
1563
01:45:37,755 --> 01:45:40,213
WHAT I CALL
THE "BIG ROOM,"
1564
01:45:40,338 --> 01:45:43,547
A PLACE WHERE YOU COULD
CROSS A THRESHOLD
1565
01:45:43,672 --> 01:45:46,171
AND HAVE NO BARRIERS,
YOU KNOW,
1566
01:45:46,296 --> 01:45:48,588
NO KEY SIGNATURES,
NO CHORD PROGRESSIONS,
1567
01:45:48,713 --> 01:45:50,838
NO PARTICULAR FORM,
YOU KNOW,
1568
01:45:50,964 --> 01:45:52,338
AND LATER ON,
1569
01:45:52,463 --> 01:45:55,171
ORNETTE CAME TO NEW YORK
WITH HIS QUARTET
1570
01:45:55,296 --> 01:45:56,672
AND STOOD HIS GROUND
1571
01:45:56,797 --> 01:45:59,171
AND MADE THIS MUSIC
REALLY SINK IN
1572
01:45:59,296 --> 01:46:00,672
AND WORK, YOU KNOW,
1573
01:46:00,838 --> 01:46:03,672
AND THAT'S THE THING
THAT I ADMIRE ABOUT ORNETTE,
1574
01:46:03,797 --> 01:46:05,713
NOT ONLY HIS WRITING
AND PLAYING,
1575
01:46:05,838 --> 01:46:08,338
BUT THE FACT
THAT HE STOOD HIS GROUND
1576
01:46:08,463 --> 01:46:12,338
AND STOOD BY HIS MUSIC
AND TOOK THE SLINGS AND ARROWS
1577
01:46:12,463 --> 01:46:15,463
OF ALL THE CRITICISM
THAT CAME TOWARDS HIM,
1578
01:46:15,588 --> 01:46:18,838
BECAUSE A LOT OF MUSICIANS
FROM THE BEBOP SCHOOL
1579
01:46:19,005 --> 01:46:22,255
THOUGHT THAT THEY WERE
JUST PLAYING ANY OLD THING.
1580
01:46:32,797 --> 01:46:36,255
IN 1961,
ORNETTE COLEMAN ISSUED
1581
01:46:36,380 --> 01:46:39,672
A RECORD
CALLED FREE JAZZ.
1582
01:46:39,797 --> 01:46:45,838
THE COVER ART INCLUDED
A PAINTING BY JACKSON POLLOCK.
1583
01:46:45,964 --> 01:46:49,838
JUST ONE PIECE FILLED
BOTH SIDES OF THE RECORD.
1584
01:46:49,964 --> 01:46:52,338
IT WOULD HELP
PROVOKE A DEBATE
1585
01:46:52,463 --> 01:47:00,046
ABOUT THE DEFINITION OF JAZZ
THAT HAS NEVER ENDED.
1586
01:47:00,171 --> 01:47:04,005
ORNETTE COLEMAN CAME UP AND SAYS, "THIS IS FREE JAZZ."
1587
01:47:04,129 --> 01:47:07,338
BUT WHAT IS FREER THAN JAZZ?
1588
01:47:07,463 --> 01:47:11,005
AS SOON AS YOU SAY JAZZ,
YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT FREEDOM OF IMPROVISATION.
1589
01:47:11,129 --> 01:47:13,046
THE WHOLE THING
IS ABOUT FREEDOM,
1590
01:47:13,171 --> 01:47:17,005
ABOUT AMERICAN FREEDOM.
1591
01:47:17,129 --> 01:47:20,547
SO WHY ANYBODY
WOULD WANT TO FREE IT
1592
01:47:20,672 --> 01:47:25,129
BECAUSE THE WHOLE IDEA OF ART
IS TO CREATE A FORM
1593
01:47:25,255 --> 01:47:32,338
THAT IS A BULWARK
AGAINST ENTROPY, OR CHAOS.
1594
01:47:32,463 --> 01:47:34,505
YOU SEE, THAT'S THE FUNCTION
OF JAZZ.
1595
01:47:34,630 --> 01:47:39,672
IT'S NOT TO BE FORMLESS
AND ABSOLUTELY SELF-INDULGENT.
1596
01:47:39,838 --> 01:47:41,547
"I WANT TO GO THIS WAY,
I'LL GO THIS WAY, I'LL GO THAT WAY."
1597
01:47:41,672 --> 01:47:46,547
THAT'S LIKE EMBRACING
THE WAVES IN THE SEA, YOU KNOW.
1598
01:47:46,672 --> 01:47:51,005
AND SO IT'S LIKE,
YOU CANNOT EMBRACE ENTROPY.
1599
01:47:51,129 --> 01:47:53,255
YOU CANNOT EMBRACE CHAOS.
1600
01:47:53,380 --> 01:47:57,505
WE WANTED PEOPLE
TO LIKE OUR MUSIC. WE REALLY DID.
1601
01:47:57,630 --> 01:48:01,046
BUT I REALLY BELIEVE
THAT MOST GREAT MUSICIANS ARE FREE MUSICIANS.
1602
01:48:01,171 --> 01:48:05,005
IF YOU LISTEN TO COLEMAN HAWKINS
PLAY, TO IMPROVISE,
1603
01:48:05,129 --> 01:48:07,005
IF YOU LISTEN
TO THELONIOUS MONK IMPROVISE,
1604
01:48:07,129 --> 01:48:08,505
IF YOU LISTEN TO BUD POWELL,
1605
01:48:08,630 --> 01:48:11,838
THEY IMPROVISED ON A LEVEL
THAT I CALL BEYOND CATEGORY,
1606
01:48:12,005 --> 01:48:15,046
PLAYING SO FREE AND SO DEEPLY
1607
01:48:15,171 --> 01:48:20,046
AT A LEVEL OF, YOU KNOW,
I CALL IT "WITH YOUR LIFE INVOLVED."
1608
01:48:20,171 --> 01:48:23,338
AND THAT'S WHAT WE DID.
1609
01:48:23,463 --> 01:48:25,338
BEING WILLING
TO GIVE YOUR LIFE--
1610
01:48:25,505 --> 01:48:27,338
TO GIVE UP YOUR LIFE,
1611
01:48:27,505 --> 01:48:31,505
RISKING YOUR LIFE,
IT'S ALMOST LIKE BEING ON THE FRONT LINE IN A BATTLE.
1612
01:48:31,630 --> 01:48:34,005
BEING ABLE...
1613
01:48:34,129 --> 01:48:43,005
WANTING TO GIVE YOUR LIFE
FOR WHAT YOU'RE DOING.
1614
01:48:43,129 --> 01:48:45,005
FOR THE NEXT 40 YEARS,
1615
01:48:45,171 --> 01:48:49,630
THE AVANT-GARDE MUSIC
THAT ORNETTE COLEMAN AND MANY OTHERS PLAYED
1616
01:48:49,755 --> 01:48:53,005
WOULD CONTINUE TO INSPIRE
AND TO DIVIDE
1617
01:48:53,129 --> 01:48:55,942
THE WORLD OF JAZZ.
128816
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.